Related Informations:
Booms & Drums:
Humming, Groaning: |
Multi-tonal, Trumpet Sounds: ZT Q&A Oct, 1 2011
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Previous Posting: https://poleshift.ning.com/profiles/blogs/ukraine-strange-sound-in-...
ZetaTalk Q&A for February 25, 2012:
My question is regarding the YouTube strange sounds video posted by Gerard yesterday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUdZGm476yA On the Strange Sounds blog I posted a response as follows: Not trying to discredit anyone on the Montana video/audio. I believe what is recorded. But I'd really be interested in Zeta feedback on it because it reminds me of what happened in Close Encounters of the Third Kind - the musical sounds that the spacecraft emitted. The sound produced in Missoula is what is called in music a major seventh chord. In the key of C it would be C-E-G-B; in this case with an extra underlying G as the first note. I have a hard time believing that anything in nature could create this without help - possibly ET help. The notes are played separately up the scale/chord and then down the scale/chord. Could the Zetas please comment on what the source might be?
SOZT
Missoula lies in a valley between mountain ranges that are riddled with rivers draining the steep mountain sides. If Kiev has multi-tonal trumpets because the reservoir is vibrating, and Belarus has horns because the river there is vibrating, then why should Missoula be exempt? The regions where the vibrating Earth plays music are where water is being vibrated. Elsewhere, it sounds like a roar, like Godzilla rising from the sea and roaming the land. Noise is sound where every frequency is heard. Music is controlled such that harmonics, or coinciding or duplicating frequencies are heard.
That several distinct tones were heard in Missoula, each in turn, only means that the body of water producing them increased its frequency from tone to tone. In Kiev, chords were heard, as more than one arm of the reservoir was set to vibrating. The thrumming or fan beating sound that preceded the Missoula tones was the rock layers being pulled apart, as the N American continent is being pulled into a bow, as we have often explained. As the jerking apart and rebound of the underlying rock layers picked up the pace, the pitchof the music the nearby river produced climbed. Simple as that.
EOZT
ZetaTalk from the Jan, 21 2012 Q&A:
Strange sounds are heard all over the world! Can the Zetas comment? http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message1756314/pg1 [and from another] My question pertains to the noises, similar to the ones heard in Kiev, happening over the past week all over the world. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZ2ZcmMxehk&feature=channel_video_title Here is a video compilation of some of the places experiencing these noises, some of the videos have been accused of being a hoax, and the essence of my question for the Zetas is; what is going on? I've managed to locate some videos from Australia, posted recently, that seem to verify what others have posted from other users located in different parts of Australia, one of the videos located here. It would appear we are seeing the "Kiev Effect" taking place worldwide now, and only recently on this scale; there is obviously more to this than meets the eye, would the Zetas care to comment?
SOZT
Where initially only a hum, and only in certain notorious parts of the world, rock under stress has become noisy. Known as the Taos hum, the sound of a diesel engine running somewhere underground was an early entry. Then the Seattle drums entered the arena, rhythmic booming which was ascribed to flapping manhole covers. Booms from snapping and heaving rock were reported in the New Madrid region and humming along the St. Lawrence Seaway increased.
But in 2011, it became clear that where we predicted that the Earth would moan during the 5.9 days of rotation stoppage, it was not going to be silent between then and now. The trumpets of Kiev and the horns of Belarus went viral on the Internet, followed quickly by a roar over Tampa Bay that sounded like Godzilla emerging from the sea. Now, in early 2012, this has spread to the drums of Costa Rica and the howl of Alberta and the Borneo snore.
Where is this leading? At least half the Earth, at any given point in time, will be having some sort of tension in its rock. Clapping and grinding fault lines, vibrating bodies of water, trembling rock strata resisting being pulled apart, and snapping rock under compression or being bent. All will be noisy, and the most likely reaction among those who hear it will be to conclude that the End Times have arrived. However known in various cultures around the world, allhave some reference to the coming times. The establishment will be unable to explain away these sounds, and once again the Internet will be sought and will lead inevitably to our explanations.
EOZT
http://beforeitsnews.com/story/1608/285/Mysterious_Sound_Of_Apocaly...
Strange Sound Heard Throughout Costa Rica
January 11, 2012
http://www.costaricanewssite.com/strange-sound-heard-throughout-cos...
Is it the mysterious sound of the so-called coming Apocalypse? Some think that the mysterious sound heard in Costa Rica at around 12:30am this morning is exactly that. It is important to note that this is not the wind nor was it filmed anywhere near the ocean. The sound was heard throughout the entire country from Heredia to Perez Zeledon. The Costa Rica Volcanologist and Seismologist Organization is saying there is no Earth movements recorded at the time of the strange sound.
AUDIO: http://www.zetatalk5.com/ning/14ja001.mp3
ZetaTalk from the Jan, 14 2012 Q&A:
SOZT
There is a subset of the Caribbean Plate called the Panama Plate, though this subset moves as one with the Caribbean Plate. Nevertheless, there is a fault line running through Costa Rica, and during the incessant pressure of the slow moving S American roll fault lines can pull apart and bang back together again, like clapping. As the recent cold spells in India reveal, the N Pole of Earth is pushed violently away when the Sun is over New Zealand and the magnetic N Pole of Earth (currently over Siberia) comes up over the horizon. This equates to midnight in Costa Rica, which is when the drums were heard. Residents there should get used to these midnight drums, which will be with them for some time.
EOZT
Please collect Strange Sounds, Earthquake-lights and the like, in this Post.
[Edited by the Moderation]
Comment
Map of recent mystery booms -
1. Clintonville, Wisconsin, March 19 - 27
2. Montello, Wisconsin, March 20
3. Ferndale, Michigan, March 31
4. Barrie, Ontario, March 24
5. Poconos, Pennsylvania, March 30
Another likely St. Lawrence Seaway adjustment -
Mystery Boom in Barrie, Ontario (March 24)
Residents left wondering after strange noise; similar noise reported in Wisconsin.
Sounds described as ‘sonic booms’ reported in the Green Bay area of Wisconsin have been declared a mini earthquake, but similar sounds heard in Barrie’s northwest end have yet to be identified.
Around 10 p.m., Tuesday, families on Wallace Drive took to the street after a loud sound ripped through the neighbourhood causing concern among residents.
Residents in the Barrie neighbourhood described the sound as a dump truck hitting a house, a propane tank exploding and a sonic boom displacement of air.
Residents in Clintonville, Wis., reported hearing similar sounds Sunday evening and Monday morning.
After investigating, the U.S. Geological Survey announced on Thursday the sounds resulted from a 1.5-magnitude earthquake, which can be felt within a eight-kilometre radius.
Barrie and Clintonville share the same latitude.
No physical evidence was found to determine what caused the sound in the Wallace Drive area in Barrie.
Yvonne Buchanan lives in the area on McVeigh Drive and said the sound had her more than confused.
“I thought it was a propane tank (blowing up) or some crazy thing,” she said. “I never thought anything of it because we didn’t hear any sirens or anything.”
Barrie police said there were no calls for service in the area at the time or reports matching a loud sound. A sonic boom is a loud sound similar to one caused by an explosion, but is the result of supersonic travel, usually from an aircraft breaking the speed of sound.
The Canadian 1 Air Division’s CF-18 is the only Canadian aircraft capable of supersonic travel.
Public affairs officer Capt. Holly Brown, with the air division in Manitoba, said two CF-18 planes flew from 4 Wing Bagotville in Quebec to 8 Wing Trenton in Ontario on Wednesday, but didn’t reach speeds fast enough to break the sound barrier.
“We’ve had queries in the past where people have reported a sonic boom and there was no CF-18 activity at all,” she said. “Typically, our CF-18s don’t break the sound barrier while they’re transiting.”
Corinna Horton was getting ready for work at 5:30 a.m. on Wednesday when the lights flickered just before a sonic boom rattled her Ottawa-area home.
“All of a sudden the lights flickered and I thought it was a pulse and then all of a sudden, boom,” she told the Examiner. “It was still dark out and all the birds started going crazy outside and a couple of dogs started to bark.”
When the sonic sound pierced the air, Horton said she could feel it all around her.
“The fact that the lights flickered beforehand I found very interesting,” she said. “At first, I thought it was a blast like a demolition bomb, but there’s no way they would have given permission for that that early.”
Brown didn’t rule out aircraft completely, but said because Nav Canada monitors the country’s skies, the military doesn’t always know who’s flying above us.
“If it was U.S. Air Force aircraft we don’t necessarily know about it because if they filed a flight plan with Nav Canada it doesn’t even come to our attention,” she said. “There are a lot of things that make loud noises out there. If there are low clouds, it can make things sound a lot louder.”
Even though Clintonville has answers, Buchanan said she knows what she heard was real.
“It was loud,” she said. “I definitely heard something.”
“It was like a loud sonic boom. When I went outside, numerous neighbours came out to see what happened,” Rob Higgins said. “No one could see anything. Some people said it sounded like a major car crash.”
“Originally, I thought some huge thing was thrown at our house. Not a car, but maybe a big barrel or something large,” Higgins added.
“I went outside and realized everyone heard something and it couldn’t have just been our house.”
Mystery Boom Reported in Southeast Georgia (March 15) -
Reports of loud sound, earth shaking reports come from 5 counties.
It wasn't an earthquake that rattled windows and store shelves early, but residents across Southeast Georgia heard and felt something big Thursday morning.
"My wife and I, we heard this loud noise -- this booming noise," said Officer Todd Rhodes of the Brunswick Police Department. "It was a noise that literally shook our home."
When Rhodes got to work, he learned his 911 center was swamped with calls of people with similar reports.
"Everyone was very concerned," Rhodes said. "There was some panic there because you know when you hear that noise as far-reaching as it was, and not only hearing it but feeling it, you want to know, 'What is this?'"
Reports came in to Channel 4's newsroom from Nahunta to Folkston about a loud noise and buildings shaking between 8:15 and 8:30 a.m.
"Up at City Hall, they said they felt something shake," said Folkston resident Ericka Smith.
The Georgia State Patrol says they received calls from Brantley, Camden, Charlton, Glynn and McIntosh counties asking about the boom and rumble.
The manager at Satilla Grocery in Waynesville reviewed surveillance video that showed the building shaking.
"Next thing I know we just hear this big old rattle," Deanna Brower said. "The doors here rattled really hard, and we thought maybe somebody had actually hit the doors or something."
The U.S. Geological Survey said there was no indication of a earthquake in the area, but had hear reports of either a sonic boom or other event that cause the ground to rumble.
Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay said they were not conducting any operations that would have caused a sonic boom or explosion.
Channel 4 checked with the Navy and Marines, which said there were two F/A-18 Super Hornets flying over Georgia at the time, but they were nowhere close to the speed of sound.
The Federal Aviation Administration said it had no record of any aircraft going supersonic in the area on Thursday.
Late in the day, the Georgia Department of Emergency Management said Air Force jets were doing training exercises off the coast of Brunswick and one got too close to land.
The fact that no one can explain what caused the boom and shake for most of the day was disconcerting to local residents.
"We haven't heard anything, and that's sad," Rhodes said mid-afternon. "So many people here have felt that and we don’t have a clue what it was."
NOTE: Watch the video Earth movement captured by grocery store surveillance camera (1:20).
Mystery Boom Reported in Poconos, Pennsylvania (March 30) -
‘That noise was not thunder,’ Poconos residents say.
Strong thunderstorms hit the Poconos Friday night, moving through shortly after 10 p.m. and continuing for at least a half hour, but the weather event that had folks talking was a loud sonic-like boom that shook houses at about 10:15 p.m. Gilda Spiotta of Long Pond said, “The shaking last night lasted unusually long. Didn’t sound like thunder, didn’t feel like thunder, was wondering if something happened on 380/80; tanker accident.”
Another Long Pond resident, Lorene R. Allman-Mars: “My son was at the back door letting the dogs out and he reported that he saw a large flash of light fill the sky toward/above the FedEx distribution site on 940, then he heard a loud boom. It didn’t look like lightning; it looked like a bomb blew up in the air. I was on the second floor of the house; I didn’t see anything but I heard the boom and felt it shake the house. I actually felt it under my feet. The floors shook; I have never felt lightning shake the house like that before and we’ve been up here 20 years!”
Some readers suggested an earthquake or an explosion, but said that definitely was no routine thunder. Meteorologist and Pocono weather expert Ben Gelber offered this explanation:
“One possibility is that thunderstorms in our chilly environment near the surface tonight, associated with an inversion of warm air aloft, sound much louder.” He added, “The sound waves are refracted back to the surface and reverberate in ways that we normally do not experience as they bounce between the surface and the inversion near the base of the clouds.”
Other residents commented from across the Poconos:
“My kids and I heard the sound in Saw Creek,” said Winnie Michaluk. “Our windows rattled and our dogs were barking like crazy.” Russo Albuja of Tobyhanna said, “I was driving along 196 on my way home from work when I felt the BOOM. It was so extreme, my car shook and on my left hand side on an empty field – all I saw was this HUGE flash of light coming from where the airport location would be at. Afterwards, I heard nothing. Kinda scared me that I rushed home and locked my doors.”
Jennifer Knarr of Milford chimed in: “My husband and I were in bed watching tv when we heard this rumbling noise we thought it was thunder but it lasted a while he even got up to look outside no storms at that time here. We live in Milford on top of a mountain, sounded like a bunch of semi trucks going down our quiet street!” Laura Bush: “Yes, I felt it here in Sciota. I immediately texted my kids in their rooms, ‘What the heck was that.’ One said, ‘I don’t know, earthquake?” Judy Ann Porter: “I live in Pocono Farms Country Club and my family and I were sitting watching TV and felt a loud bang and the house shook. We thought it was a earthquake. We got our supplies together but heard nothing else after that. Someone mentioned thunder, but thunder doesn’t shake houses. Scary.”
Phillip Mangat: “Yeah around 10:35 I thought another meth lab went boom!” Jill Nobles: “It sure felt like an explosion or an earthquake to me. I am up near Wooddale, by Analomink on the top of the mountain. At 10:12-ish, my whole house shook. It knocked things off of the counters, rattled things hanging on my walls, and shook my whole house violently. We didn’t sustain any damage, but the noise and the shaking were crazy. The sound was like an explosion, or a freight train in my bedroom. Not thunder.” And another from Long Pond “I live in Emerald Lakes and at about 10:15p.m. I heard a loud noise and the house shook for about 5 seconds and my lights dimmed a little bit.”
Source: http://youtu.be/_SaexvwDlIE
Mysterious Booms Continue for Third Night in Clintonville, WI - Residents Leaving Town
Police, residents and experts are baffled by the source of mysterious booms and shaking that have been plaguing the town of Clintonville, Wis., for the past three days, and have caused some residents to flee.
The Clintonville Police Department said they have received over 250 calls about noises from underground shaking homes in the northeast corner of the town near Green Bay, Wis. with approximately 5000 residents.
The mystery is even stumping some of the brightest minds at the University of Wisconsin, who were consulted about whether or not these booms could be related to seismic activity.
"I think we can rule out that standard earthquake activity, [that] some swarm of earthquakes is happening in that region. It also really looks like it's not connected to, say, unusual drilling activity or some other kind of real obvious human induced signal, " Harold Tobin, one of those professors in the Geoscience department at the University of Wisconsin told WKOW.
Tobin headed to Clintonville after he received a call from the Wisconsin Geological Survey office asking for help.
Tobin and a colleague looked at activity on several of the seismometers that sit in the region near Clintonville. He says there is an indication that it is an especially noisy site, but not noisy enough to cause the sounds people there are describing.
Tobin says it does appear the sounds are either coming from the surface of the ground or just underneath the surface. He says that he is just as confused and intrigued as anyone as to what exactly is causing the sounds, and adds that there are other instruments that could be put out in the region where the sounds are to record noise in the air, and also ground vibrations at a higher frequency.
This would help to pinpoint exactly where the sounds and coming from and what their characteristics are.
Residents of the area say that they find the noises and shakes puzzling and troubling.
"They're pretty loud when they vibrate the windows and you can feel the vibration on the floor and on the ground," Verda Schultz told ABC News affiliate WBAY.
The city has so far managed to rule out problems with the water and sewer system, elevated gas levels, area blasting or mining, industrial businesses, and even military operations, WBAY reported.
"I think that right now the greatest possibility is that it is some sort of natural phenomenon. I think that it's a possibility that there is some earth shifting going on underneath the ground that creates those popping sort of exploding popping or vibrating noises that people feel," City Administrator Lisa Kuss said.
The booms and shakes have gotten so bad that they have begun to drive residents from the town.
"Our dog is scared, our neighbors are leaving and stuff, so we decided we are going somewhere else for a while," Dennis Padia said. "It's that loud, and it bothers you. You can't go to sleep."
Unexplained Tremors Continue on Vancouver Island, BC
A barn on the 4000-block of Otter Point Road collapsed after a series of unexplained tremors rumbled through the region on Thursday, March 15.
Barrie Hanslip, owner of the 35-acre property where the barn was located, said the steepled barn tumbled downward after a large “boom” and rumble at 11:30 a.m. The large tremor was preceded by two smaller shakes around 9:00 a.m.
Hanslip wasn’t home at the time of the collapse, but her niece, Sandra Richardson, said two seconds after the large third rumble, she heard a creak and the barn collapsed.
“I thought my aunt was underneath it and was screaming for her, but I ran up to the barn and saw her car was gone,” Richardson said.
Richardson, whose residence is located adjacent to the dilapidated barn, said the earthquake-like rumbles shook the stove pipe in her home.
Hanslip said although the barn was 50 years old, it would’ve stood erect if left undisturbed.
“It’s fairly old. It was due to come down, but it certainly wouldn’t have fallen down on its own. It was well-braced,” she said.
Alison Bird, seismologist with Natural Resources Canada, said there were no earthquakes in the region during that time, adding there were calls from other residents who reported shaking.
Sooke fire chief Steve Sorensen also said the fire department received an onslaught of calls, but did not have further information.
Both Richardson and Hanslip said the tremors have been a regular occurrence in the past few weeks.
Concerned residents have been commenting on the unknown tremors on the Discover Sooke Facebook page since January 2012. According to resident reports, previous rumbles were felt around Saseenos, East Sooke, Whiffin Spit and Otter Point.
Unexplained Booms Continue for a Second Night in Clintonville
The unexplained booms, rattling, and shaking was felt for a second night in a row in Clintonville. Loud booms shook the city early Tuesday morning, and were reportedly more widespread. Residents say they're still wondering and worrying.
The unexplained noises, like underground explosions, and the tremors began early Monday morning around 1:45 and tapered off nearly 12 hours later.
Although much weaker than what was felt earlier in the day, the trembling began again around 8:30 and 10:00 in the same northeast corner of the city where more than 150 reports of shaking came in earlier. Police say more reports then came in early Tuesday morning, at about 12:20, 1:20, 2:20 and 5:10-- and were no longer limited to the northeast part of town.
Dispatchers say some were quite loud, and were even heard at the police station, southwest of the center of town.
Public service crews and police have been monitoring the area, checking on residents who've been congregating in the streets to talk about what they're experiencing.
People say they're afraid the shaking will get worse.
"I'm not liking this. I'm going to want to leave. Basically, I don't want to stay here because you just don't know. It's scary, very scary," Cindy Miller said.
So far the city has ruled out gas lines, water mains, and an earthquake as possible reasons for the shaking. It's been in contact with geologists and the military.
The city does believe it's something geological.
"I would say it certainly leads us to believe it is some sort of a geological thing. If the earth's temperature changes, does that mean something different? It certainly could be," City Administrator Lisa Kuss opined.
The city continues to monitor the area.
People who live in the area are advised if they feel anything, or notice any changes to the landscape on their property, to call the police non-emergency number to report it.
"Mysterious explosions. Unexplained shaking. Something's going on in Clintonville, Wisconsin, but nobody seems to know what it is.
The sounds -- variously described as rattling pipes, clanging metal, thunder or firecrackers -- have continued on and off since early Sunday night in just one part of the small town of 4,600, located about 180 miles northeast of Madison.
Accompanying the sounds are vibrations that have shaken homes and household objects in the northeast corner of town, city manager Lisa Kuss said.
The sounds were loud enough Monday morning that a CNN journalist could hear them during a cell phone conversation with Kuss.
The baffling phenomenon does not appear to have caused any significant damage or injuries, according to Kuss.
Workers peered into manhole covers and utility crews tested for leaking natural gas and other problems, but no one has yet to find anything amiss, Kuss said.
Geologists and the military don't seem to have any quick answers, either, she said.
U.S. Geological Survey records show no seismic activity anywhere in Wisconsin Sunday or Monday.
"It's like we're imagining things but it ain't, because we're all out and talking to find out what's going on," Clintonville resident Verda Shultz told CNN affiliate WLUK.
Absent any better explanations for the sounds and sensations that have, well, rattled, the town, residents were left to their own devices to come up with explanations." Source
Read also:
Source: http://youtu.be/c1fib-gpgSA
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