"And I beheld, and heard the voice of one eagle flying through the midst of heaven, saying with a loud voice: Woe, woe, woe to the inhabitants of the earth.... [Apocalypse (Revelation) 8:13]
Monday, February 8, 2016
Planet X Incoming: Increased Volcanic Activity & Meotorite Fatality
Planet X Incoming: Increased Volcanic Activity & Meotorite Fatality
Indian man could be first recorded human fatality due to a meteorite
Sodomites Beware!
Indian officials say a meteorite struck the campus of a private
engineering college on Saturday, killing one person. If scientists
confirm the explosion was due to a meteorite, it would be the first
recorded human fatality due to a falling space rock.
According to local reports, a bus driver was killed on Saturday when a
meteorite landed in the area where he was walking, damaging the window
panes of nearby buses and buildings. Three other people were injured.
On Sunday, various Indian publications, including The Hindu,
reported that the chief minister of Tamil Nadu, Jayalalithaa, issued a
statement confirming the death: "A mishap occurred yesterday when a
meteorite fell in the campus of a private engineering college in Vellore
district's K Pantharappalli village." Tamil Nadu is located in southern
India, and has a population of more than 70 million people.
There have been no confirmed human deaths due to meteorite strikes,
although there have been a number of interesting close calls, based upon
a list kept by International Comet Quarterly. For example, meteorites have landed in homes and hit people as they have slept, but have not killed them.
In our most recent close call, a bright fireball created a huge airblast
over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in 2013. The resulting shock damaged
thousands of buildings and injured more than 1,000 people. But there
were no fatalities.
Universal karma? Indian man believed first to be killed by meteorite
The “mysterious explosion” that took place on Saturday in
Vellore, a city in the south Indian state of Tamil, has been confirmed
as a meteorite impact by Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa.
February 2016 – MEXICO– A
volcano eruption in western Mexico has sent a spectacular plume of
smoke and ash high into the air. Colima volcano is one of three that
make up the Colima Volcanic Complex, near the west coast of Mexico. It
is one of the most active volcanoes in the country and has erupted more
than 40 times, including several times in the past few years. The
volcano is permanently monitored by the University of Colima. –ABC
Kilauea Volcano – Hawaii:
(Jan 10, 2016) Nature’s fury was on full display as a rock fall in
Hawaii cause an impressive explosion at Kilauea volcano. Volcano
watchers recorded the massive explosion on Friday morning, when rocks
splashed into the lake of lava at Halemaumau crater. These types of
explosions are likely to occur when the lava lake level is relatively
high, as it was on Friday, scientists say.
In fact, the lake was about 100 feet
below the vent’s rim right before the blast. When the lava lake is high,
scientists say rocks in the vent wall heat up, expand and then become
unstable causing a big section of the rocks to collapse. Fortunately,
the explosion does not pose a threat to any neighboring communities.
Kileaua’s ongoing eruption began way back in January of 1983. –ABC 13
Mount Egon – Indonesia:
(Jan 19, 2016) More than 1,200 people were evacuated from their homes
when a volcano in eastern Indonesia spews clouds of ash and toxic gas
into the air on January 19, 2016. Officials said they had distributed
thousands of gas masks to villagers around Mount Egon in eastern Flores
Island as the choking fumes from the volcano intensified. All residents
within three kilometers of the volcano were ordered to evacuate and
roads were also closed.
The volcano began rumbling in December
of 2015 but has become more active in recent months. During its last
serious eruption in 2008, Mount Egon blasted smoke and volcanic material
nearly six kilometers into the atmosphere. In January 2004, the volcano
erupted, forcing 6,000 people to evacuate the area. Mount Egon is one
of 129 active volcanoes in Indonesia, which sits on the Ring of Fire, a
belt of seismic activity running around the basin of the Pacific Ocean. –ABC
Mount Makaturing – Philippines:
(Jan 22, 2016) Authorities in Lanao del Sur are investigating the
cause of a fire that destroyed the mountain forests of Butig town near
Cagayan de oro City, in the Philippines on Thursday night, with the
nearby Mount Makaturing volcano high on the suspect list. The magma
mount is one of the most active in the Philippines and sits on the
Pacific Ring of Fire.
The 1,940-metre peak is believed to
have erupted 10 times in the past, and could be due another as the last
on record was in March 1882. According to locals, heavy smoke enveloped
the area near the town as well as Alamada in Wao town and the blaze
appeared “lava-like,” as it glowed from the distance throughout Thursday
night and into the early hours. –Express
Popocatepetl Volcano – Mexico:
(Jan 25, 2016) Ashes from the Popocatepetl volcano have rained down on
the airport of the central Mexican city of Puebla, prompting authorities
to temporarily shut down operations.
Four explosions and 39 low-intensity
exhalations of ash were recorded between Sunday and Monday at the
5,452-metre volcano, according the National Disaster Prevention Centre.
Puebla state civil protection department director Jesus Morales said
airport operations would be closed for three hours so workers could
remove ash from the runway.
The shutdown will not affect any
flights as none are due to land during that time, he said. Popocatepetl,
which is 55 kilometres south-east of Mexico City, had its last major
eruption in 2000, forcing thousands of people to evacuate from
surrounding towns. –ABC
Turrialba Volcano – Costa Rica:
On Saturday afternoon, geologists at the Observatory on Volcanology and
Seismology at the National University of Costa Rica (Spanish acronym:
OVSICORI) reported a new eruption at the Turrialba Volcano, the most
active colossus in our country. The volcanic event took place about ten
minutes before 2:00 pm during a warm, yet extremely windy, afternoon.
The seismographic sensors of the OVSICORI began stirring after 1:50 pm,
at which time the scientists on duty activated their crater cameras to
capture the eruption.
In the beginning, the eruption was
mostly a slow emanation of volcanic ash and noxious gases. About ten
minutes into the natural event, a more powerful ejection occurred and a
solid plume formed about 500 meters into the air. Thanks to the crisp
weather conditions and the clear-blue afternoon skies, the eruption on
the western crater was visible from the summit of the nearby Irazu
volcano.
Chemistry experts at the OVSICORI
combined their observations with data from the Institute of Meteorology
to provide a forecast of where the ash clouds were headed yesterday. To
this effect, they used the AERMOD atmospheric dispersion modeling system
to create a forecast that indicated a northwesterly direction high over
Guapiles and passing over most of the Heredia province on municipal
elections day. Some ash fell on the vegetation and crops of the massive
Finca La Picada farm near the volcano. Elsewhere, a strong smell of
sulfur was detected by neighbors in Concepcion de Heredia.
As previously reported by The Costa
Rica Star, past activity from the Turrialba has disrupted daily life
with school and airport closures as well as diminished farming
operations; nonetheless, that does not seem to be the case at this time.
–Costa Rica Star
WARNING EVENTS Vulcano eruptions all over the world SHOCKING