Does an Increase in Mysterious “Booms” Foretell Mega-Quake?
Back in October, I wrote an article entitled “Numerous Reports of Mysterious Booms and Strange Lights Over South Carolina,”
in which I described the sounds and vibrations heard and felt all
across the Pee Dee region of South Carolina with some witnesses even
describing strange lights in the sky at the time of the event. These
strange occurrences were eerily similar to those described by
individuals all across the state of Michigan like Bob Powell of The Truth Is Viral,
who was actually detained as a result of attempting to investigate the
nature of these sounds and vibrations. Please see my article, “Investigation Continues Into Source of Strange Michigan Area ‘Explosions’ and Radiation Spikes” for a further description of what took place in Michigan.
Similar noises and vibrations were also felt in New Jersey around October, as I wrote in my article “New Mysterious ‘Booms’ Reported in New Jersey.”
But while the incidents in Michigan and New Jersey were researched
from a distance, it just so happens that this writer was in the Pee Dee
region of South Carolina when the two “mysterious booms” in the first
article took place. At the time, I described the incidents as follows:
[The incidents] spann[ed] the entire Pee Dee region and all the way into North Carolina. On the evening of November 5, around 7:30-7:45 p.m., various law enforcement and local news agencies wereAfter the initial curiosity surrounding the incidents subsided, news coverage and local talk expectedly subsided as well. Yet, on January 6,
contacted by individuals living in the Pee Dee region of South Carolina
in reference to a loud “boom” that was large enough to shake their
houses.
The reports were numerous around Pamplico, Johnsonville, Marion,
Hemingway, Aynor, Nichols, Hannah, and Mullins. However, as stated
earlier, reports also came from as far away as Evergreen, North
Carolina.
Marion County dispatchers alone received more than 100 calls in ten minutes related to the “booms.”
The US Geological Society has publicly stated that there was no
seismic activity in the region on these dates and emergency dispatchers confirmed that there had been no plane crash.
Very soon after the event, Johnsonville Police Chief, Ron Douglas,
claimed the “booms” were “from a handful of military aircraft” that had
broken the speed of sound.
However, this explanation, which was rapidly adopted by the local
media, does not hold water. For one thing, most of the individuals I
have spoken to (as well as myself) have heard jets break the sound
barrier before and both the sound and the impact of the mysterious
“booms” were much different than that of jets breaking the sound
barrier.
Secondly, if the jets were the cause of the sound and of the heavy
vibrational impact that shook so many houses, the jets themselves would
have had to be flying very low. But, if the jets were flying low enough
for this type of effect to be achieved, witnesses would have also been
able to hear the jets.
This writer can personally attest to the intensity of the “booms” as
I, myself, was in the area at the time of the incident. The sound, much
like what Bob Powell described sounded much more like artillery than any
other comparable sound. There was no lead up to the shaking, it was
simply as if one was experiencing the vibrations of an explosion.
The impact was so strong that one way to describe hearing and feeling
the impact from inside the house, it would be if one could imagine a
full grown adult climbing on top of the back of a couch or recliner and
leaping off, landing full force on the living room floor. Much like this
scenario, the impact was sudden and short-lived.
The sound, however, was extremely similar to the firing of artillery, much as Powell described it in Michigan.
The above incident occurred, as mentioned earlier, on November 5.
However, one week prior, a similar, albeit weaker, explosion was heard
in the same locations. Reports were made to this writer from both Marion
and Mullins in terms of the noticeable impacts and sounds of this
separate explosion. Like the first, the sound was similar to artillery,
the impact was also distinct but sudden and brief.
To my knowledge, there have been no mainstream local reports of the
earlier “explosion.” Also as in the second incident, I can personally
attest to the nature of the first.
2013, South Carolina residents again began hearing these booms and
feeling the vibrations powerful enough to “rattle windows.” This time,
the location was not the Pee Dee region but in the Red Bank area of
Lexington County. Interestingly enough, around the same time period
(between January 2- 6 2013), these “booms” were heard and felt in other
locations across the country including in Alaska, Oklahoma,
Massachusetts, and Indiana.
The Pee Dee region was not to be overlooked, however, as on March 2, 2013, more reports were
published regarding booms and vibrations powerful enough to shake
houses. As with the other instances of booms and vibrations, there was
no seismological activity in the area at the time. [1]
However, since the first set of occurrences in the Pee Dee region,
two individuals have been paying special notice to the incidents of the
mysterious booms, detailing and recording the dates of their occurrence
as felt in the Conway/Myrtle Beach area.
In discussion with these individuals (who wish to remain anonymous),
it was reported to this writer that on February 27, 2013, at around 6:45
pm, there were three booms occurring within seconds of one another.
Some only felt one boom, others felt all three. However, it was
described as sounding and feeling like “someone was dragging something
heavy across the floor, only it was coming from outside.”
Another boom was also reported on March 5, 2013, just two days after
the boom reported by the local media. Still another one was heard on
March 9, 2013.
These booms are not necessarily strangers to South Carolina as a 2011 report from the Post and Courier reveals. It states,
A loud boom shook the coastal Lowcountry WednesdayThe Post and Courier article, entitled, “’Pretty Good Shake’ hits area but what was it?”
morning, felt from Mount Pleasant to West Ashley. And once again, no one
could say what it caused it.
Seismographs at the College of Charleston didn’t pick up any earthquake
activity. The Charleston Air Force Base didn’t report any military
aircraft creating sonic booms.
No commercial vessels responded to a U.S. Coast Guard message asking for reports if it had been felt offshore.
. . . . .
The latest blast hit just before 10 a.m.
“It was a pretty good shake, a pretty loud boom,” said Mark Reamer, who felt it in the Financial Management Group office off Coleman Boulevard near Patriots Point in Mount Pleasant.
“I said it was probably one of those big electricity pillars getting
pummeled down.” He wondered only half-facetiously if it might have been a
piece of the satellite that fell out of orbit last week.
“The mirrors on the wall rattled,” said Melinda Issacson, who was working out at home on James Island.
Doors, windows and houses shook in Mount Pleasant and on Sullivan’s
Island, according to Twitter reports. A West Ashley tweeter said it
sounded like a gust of wind against the house.
About the same time, a large tree fell across Hut Road on Johns
Island and a nearby resident reported an explosion. But a tweeter in
North Charleston said nothing was felt there.
does, however, provide some interesting information when it states that
the booms might have come as a result of the “Seneca Guns,” a
so-far-unexplained phenomenon felt along coasts around the world.” The
article speculates that yet another series of booms in March 2011 were
themselves the famed “Seneca Guns.”
For those unaware of this phenomena, the Seneca Guns, are described by the USGS in the following manner:
The term “Seneca guns” is just a name, not anYet for all the inability to determine the nature of the Seneca Guns,
explanation. It does not tell us anything about what causes these noises
and shakings. The name originated in a short story that James Fennimore
Cooper wrote during the 1800’s. The name refers to booms that have been
heard on the shores of Lake Seneca and Lake Cayuga in New York State.
The name has been applied to similar noises along the coasts of North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. Similar booms are called Barisol
guns in coastal India. These phenomena have also occurred in three
widely separated places around the world. That’s about all we know about
the Seneca guns.
we do know that such sounds and vibrations have been linked to
earthquakes, with some of these booms occurring during earthquakes with
varying intensity, with others occurring shortly before or after the
earthquake actually takes place.
What might be particularly concerning to those living on the Eastern
seaboard is the fact that these exact kinds of sounds were heard either
before, during, or after the two of the biggest geological events on the
East Coast to have occurred in American history – The 1886 Charleston
Earthquake and the 1811-1812 New Madrid Earthquake.
In regards to the Charleston earthquake, the USGS states, “For
several weeks after the Charleston Earthquake (8/31/1886) there were
many aftershocks that were reportedly accompanied by “loud detonations”.
Further quoting the original source of Clarence E. Dutton’s 1889
report, “The Charleston Earthquake of August 31, 1886,” interesting
information is provided. The report reads,
For several weeks following the principal disturbanceThere are also accounts which link “artillery-like” sounds occurring shortly before and during the New Madrid Earthquakes of 1811-1812.
minor shocks continued to be felt at frequent intervals. Many of them
would have been considered very forcible and alarming and they not been
greatly disparaged by the convulsion of August 31. Almost all of them
were accompanied by loud detonations. Mr. McGee thus describes several
which he experienced.
“I reached Summerville about 5 o’clock p.m. Detonations were heard at
intervals averaging perhaps half an hour. From that time until 9:30
p.m. occasional and very slight spasmodic tremors of an instant’s
duration accompanied the detonation. I endeavored to determine the
direction from which the sounds came, but no two individuals agreed.
They seemed to me to come from the northwest. They were much like, but
somewhat more muffled than peals of thunder at distance of half a mile
or more, or perhaps more like the discharge of a blast in a mine or
quarry at a little distance.”
Click here to hear the sound of the Seneca Guns.
Whatever the mysterious booms and vibrations are, they are prompting a
great deal of speculation amongst anyone who has had occasion to feel
them. While “official” explanations are much less than satisfactory,
even if the incidents are, in fact, the famed Seneca Guns (with all of
their own questions attached), it would be difficult to explain why the
sudden upsurge in their appearance now.
If one were to speculate wildly, then one might wonder if they are not perhaps the precursor to some major geological event.
In addition, one might also wonder whether or not the frequency of
their appearance might foretell the potential time and intensity of such
an event.
Regardless, as of the writing of this article, no satisfactory
explanations have been provided for the mysterious booms and vibrations
being heard all across South Carolina, the United States, and,
apparently, the world. Until there are acceptable explanations, it may
be that we must concur with James Fenimore Cooper whose own exposure to the Seneca Guns revealed no more information than we have today.
The “Lake Gun” is a mystery. It is a sound resembling theNotes:
explosion of a heavy piece of artillery, that can be accounted for by
none of the known laws of nature. The report is deep, hollow, distant,
and imposing. The lake seems to be speaking to the surrounding hills,
which send back the echoes of its voice in accurate reply. No
satisfactory theory has ever been broached to explain these noises.
Conjectures have been hazarded about chasms, and the escape of
compressed air by the sudden admission of water; but all this is talking
at random, and has probably no foundation in truth. The most that can
be said is, that such sounds are heard, though at long intervals, and
that no one as yet has succeeded in ascertaining their cause.
[1] Please note that many of the original local reports have since
disappeared from the internet. Original postings are included as they
are able to be found. – See more at: http://www.riseearth.com/2013/03/does-uptick-in-mysterious-booms.html#more
Source: Activist Post
Thanks to: http://aworldchaos.wordpress.com