EARTH CHANGES: (VIDEOS) “HIGH IMPACT WEATHER EVENTS”
LATEST EARTH CHANGES & WARNINGS WITHIN
“HIGH IMPACT WEATHER EVENT”
Weather conditions that threaten lives as well as farms/food chain!On November 27, 2017 a code red alert was set into motion on the resort island of Bali where the restless mount Agung Volcano has been spewing volcano ash with increasing intensity.
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Blue Moon coming in days. Nothing beats a bright and beautiful ‘Supermoon.’ Except maybe, three ‘Supermoons’. A series of three extra ‘Supermoons’ will appear on the celestial stage on December 3, 2017, January 1, 2018, and January 31, 2018. The third one will be extra special. First of all, the January 31st supermoon will feature a total lunar eclipse, with totality viewable from western North America across the pacific to Eastern Asia. MORE
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Weather anomolies continue: More than a months worth of rain in 36 hours.
December 1, 2017: THE Bureau of Meteorology has warned of a weather conditions that could threaten lives as Australia’s south east stares down what is being dubbed a “vast, intense, high impact weather event.” And it’s not just Victoria — just about every capital could get drenched. Parts of NSW could get “more than a month’s rain in 36 hours”. Victoria, Tasmania and NSW are now officially on flood alert. There are now fears three months of rain could fall in just a few days across Victoria with 300mm mooted in some areas as a front powers through southern Australia aided by tropical moisture further north.
“It is an event that poses a threat to life, there will be a massive amount of lightning, there will be roads cut, flood waters,” he said on Thursday. “Those thunderstorms will gradually all weld into a massive, great rain band, and that band will spread down across the state on Friday night and Saturday morning. “This is a vast, intense, high-impact event for this state. I think this event will turn farms into lakes.”
A Trio of Extra Full ‘Supermoons’ You Don’t Want to Miss – ‘Super Blue Blood Moon’ Coming
The lunar eclipse on January 31 will be visible during moonset. Folks in the Eastern United States, where the eclipse will be partial, will have to get up in the morning to see it. But it’s another great chance to watch the Moon. The Moon will lose its brightness and take on an eerie, fainter-than-normal glow from the scant sunlight that makes its way through Earth’s atmosphere. Often cast in a reddish hue because of the way the atmosphere bends the light, totally eclipsed Moons are sometimes called ‘Blood Moons.’ The January 31st Supermoon will also be the second full Moon of the month. Some people call the second full Moon in a month a Blue Moon, that makes it a super ‘Blue Moon.’ Blue Moons happen every two and a half years, on average. With the total eclipse, it’ll be a royal spectacle indeed: a ‘Super Blue Blood’ Moon. Sometimes the celestial rhythms sync up just right to wow us. Heed your calendar reminders. On the three dates marked, step out into the moonset or moonrise and look up for a trilogy of sky watching treats!Next cataclysmic super-eruption capable of altering the course of history is closer than expected, reveals new shocking study
This is no fantasy! A super volcanic explosion could alter the course of history as already shown in past recent geological history. Previous estimates suggested that super-eruptions happen roughly every 45,000 to 714,000 years, but a new SCHOKING study found that they could be much more frequent… like every 17,000 years or so. This we are overdue for such a cataclysmic eruption since the most recent super-eruptions occurred between 20 and 30 thousand years ago.Jonathan Rougier, professor of statistical science at Bristol University, said: “On balance, we have been slightly lucky not to experience any super-eruptions since then. In 2004, our colleagues published the first evaluation of this kind, in which super-eruptions should take place every 45-700 thousand years, which exceeds the lifetime of our civilization. Our calculations show that they occur on average once in 17 thousand years. This suggests that mankind was incredibly lucky – the last such event happened 30 thousand years ago.”
Earth’s volcanoes are now considered one of the key “conductors” of our planet’s climate. They can raise the temperature on its surface, throwing huge masses of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases and to reduce it, filling the atmosphere with particles of ash and aerosols microcephaly reflecting the rays and heat of the Sun.
Humanity in the entire brief history of its existence has already experienced several such disasters. For example, the eruption of the SUPERVOLCANO Toba, which occurred about 70 thousand years ago, led to the occurrence of a “volcanic winter” for a few years and an almost complete disappearance of people. The same power of the events occurred in New Zealand, 27 thousand years ago, 240 thousand years ago, as well as in California 760 thousand years ago.
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Could be an interesting weekend? More big quakes?
ReplyDeleteWow! A lot going on that I was unaware of.
ReplyDeleteWe must keep praying the rosary and imploring God’s mercy
ReplyDeleteTodays quakes http://quakes.globalincidentmap.com/
ReplyDeleteWe are in trouble if Yellowstone erupts. Are there any volcanos in the Midwest?
ReplyDelete