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Post by moabiter on Jul 20, 2010 8:06:42 GMT -8
US oil spill explained! BEFORE it did Fatal Warning! EQ Volcano's! Islands oil Rigs sinking www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dGoi7qBU9EMega Quake: Scott from Believers Underground | TJA Podcast | Episode #15 www.youtube.com/watch?v=wEPh0Xx7w3IWiki: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-glacial_reboundATS: www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread572112/pg1Scott Owen: Predicted rigs sinking in January, water moving around - earth wobble, magnetic field, earthquakes like Haiti, biblical white horse, fungus, bugs, Napa Valley new insects, polar bears drowning (magnetic field shifts), grizzlies mating with polar bears in NWT, extreme lightening with magnetic shifts, radioactivity is everywhere.
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Post by moabiter on Aug 2, 2010 8:09:10 GMT -8
Date-TimeMonday, August 02, 2010 at 04:34:28 UTC Sunday, August 01, 2010 at 11:34:28 PM at epicenter Distance55 km (35 miles) NNE of BATON ROUGE, Louisiana 55 km (35 miles) NW of Hammond, Louisiana 55 km (35 miles) SW of McComb, Mississippi 130 km (80 miles) NW of New Orleans, Louisiana earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsww/Quakes/us2010zlai.php_______________________________ Louisiana Earthquake Information Historic Information, Quaternary Fault and Fold Information for the Gulf of Mexico coastal region, Seismicity Map of Louisiana, Largest Earthquake in Louisiana: 1930 October 19, Magnitude 4.2, New Madrid Seismic Zone, etc. earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/states/?region=Louisiana
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Post by xxoo on Dec 8, 2010 0:38:46 GMT -8
The Big Cover Up On 12/03/2010 02:19 PM In fact there was such concern over increasing earthquake activity in the region of oil production that a 2003 study was performed by the government on the ability of the oil infrastructure to withstand earthquake forces. The first article posted here talks about those findings. GOM 4,000 Active Oil & Gas Platforms - NOAA 6-8-10The second part in the series reports on two larger earthquakes in 2006 and unusual difficulties in settling on the epicenter of one of them striking in the heart of BP’s Atlantis oil production location. The government actually published a very unusual change in the location moving the epicenter further away from BP’s oil production using in part BP data of the seismic event that was not even calibrated for recording such information. In the third article, the theory of Jack Reed is published explaining his belief that the Gulf is seismically active and connect to the New Madrid earthquakes centered in the midwest continental United States. This potential constitutes major implications for the future of the Gulf and in the world. www.stevedrinkard.com/archives/2132003. Part 1: Seismic Risk Questioned As Deep Water Development Increases The Gulf of Mexico (GOM) is not known for its earthquake activity; however, a number of earthquakes ranging between 3.0 and 4.9 on the Richter scale caused enough concern for Mineral Management Services (MMS) to engage in a 2003 study of the likely performance of subsea oil production assets during small earthquakes. The Gulf region is classified as Zone 0 for seismic risk. This means that all shallow and deepwater development of crowded subsea structures including oil rigs and pipelines have not been designed or constructed to withstand earthquake activity. www.stevedrinkard.com/archives/462006. Part 2: Large 2006 Earthquakes of 6.0 and 5.2 Magnitude Strike the Gulf of Mexico–Unidentified Oil Rig Feels Shaking — Epicenter Relocated in Green Canyon In 2003, the Mineral Management Service ordered an assessment of seismic activity in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM), which we discussed in Part 1 of this series. There was concern then whether oil production assets appeared to be in the path of increasing seismic risks. Now, within approximately three years of that study, two more larger earthquakes strike in the GOM. Let’s take a look at the history of those 2006 earthquakes. www.stevedrinkard.com/archives/1052008. Gulf of Mexico Earthquakes May Warn of Coming Catastrophe – Part 3 The Gulf of Mexico has been considered a Zero Seismic Risk Zone which means earthquake construction standards have not applied to oil production assets. This should mean that the seismic activity is quiet. Yet the earthquake activity of recent years has reenergized the question of earthquake causes in the Gulf and whether a greater risk is now posed to the environment due to highly concentrated subsea metropolises that cover the sea floor. Click image to enlargeAdded to the concern are the 27,000 abandoned oil wells that scar the sea bottom with plugs of various ages and conditions. There are thousands of temporarily abandoned wells within these numbers, that may have very inadequate plugs for the long term. Of course it is unknown what affect a major earthquake in the heart of the oil producing regions might have on all these active and abandoned wells. Abandoned wells environmental hazardTexaco Petroleum Geologist Forced to Accept Quiet Theory Reed quoted in AAPG’s publication, Explorer magazine in 2002 says: ”For all the years I have worked the Gulf of Mexico Basin I have been forced to accept the “passive” Gulf formation theory, which holds that the only movement in the basin is updip sedimentary loading that moved the salt southward,” Reed said. “But there is little evidence to support this theory, and it doesn’t fit what is observed geologically or geophysically. As Hugh Wilson said (1993), ‘It would be geologically unusual for such a large basin as the Gulf of Mexico to remain almost tectonically undisturbed for 170 million years while major orogenic disturbances repeatedly struck bordering areas.’”Jack Reed’s Map Gulf of Mexico & New Madrid FaultMore: www.stevedrinkard.com/archives/150
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Post by moabiter on Jan 23, 2011 9:09:53 GMT -8
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Post by moabiter on Apr 14, 2011 22:26:28 GMT -8
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Post by clone on Jun 24, 2011 13:43:06 GMT -8
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Post by clone on Nov 23, 2011 21:12:56 GMT -8
Arctic sea ice loss unprecedented in 1,450 years Last Updated: Nov 23, 2011 1:02 PM ET The recent loss of sea ice in the Arctic is greater than any natural variation in the past 1½ millennia, a Canadian study shows. "The recent sea ice decline … appears to be unprecedented," said Christian Zdanowicz, a glaciologist at Natural Resources Canada, who co-led the study and is a co-author of the paper published Wednesday online in Nature. In September, Germany's University of Bremen reported that sea ice had hit a record low. The U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center, using different satellite data, reported that sea ice coverage in 2011 was the second-lowest on record, after the record set in 2007, the year this photo was taken in Baffin Bay.www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2011/11/22/science-arctic-sea-ice-loss.html
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