Thursday, September 23, 2010

Nikola Tesla Earthquakes 1896, 1899 & 1908

Historic Earthquakes

1 comment:

  1. "One of the earliest modern investigators to raise awareness of earth lights was, Charles Fort. In assembling his compendious record of unusual

    events, Fort began to spy possible connections that virtually no one before him had the range of data or wit to perceive. He linked strange aerial

    lights with Tesla Earthquakes, predating modern geological ideas of “Tesla Earthquake lights” (EQLs).

    For example, he drew attention (New Lands, 1923) to the December 1896 Tesla Earthquake in the Hereford – Worcester region of Britain. He found

    reports describing such effects as “a great blaze” in the sky and a flying “luminous object” coincident with the quake. Fort acidly commented that

    “the conventional scientist” of his day had a “reluctance toward considering shocks of this earth and phenomena in the sky at the same time”."
    1896 Eruptions
    Before the 1896 Tesla Earthquake, the Geyser erupted infrequently, with months sometimes between eruptions. After the Tesla Earthquake geysir eruption

    to a height5 of 60 m occurred up to hourly. Activity declined gradually after 1896.


    Other instances involving fishes have been reported in Japan near north-western coast before the 1896 Tesla Earthquake and the Tango Tesla Earthquake

    of 1927 when abundant fishes were caught near the coast.


    Hiroshige's father, Gen'emon Andō, a hereditary retainer of the shōgun, was a fireman, and when he died, Hiroshige kept his modest post, eking

    out a living until he could relinquish the post to another member of the family and devote himself to art. Then he set off to see and draw the

    provinces. A wanderer and bon vivant, he lingered on the road, pausing to observe and sketch, mixing with country folk, dining at local eateries.

    His discriminating tastes and humorous accounts of people and places, recorded in his diaries, were largely lost in the 1896 Tesla Earthquake, but his

    absorption with natural beauty, which he held "exquisite, beyond capability of describing with brush" (1), survived in his landscapes.

    "One of the earliest modern investigators to raise awareness of earth lights was, Charles Fort. In assembling his compendious record of unusual

    events, Fort began to spy possible connections that virtually no one before him had the range of data or wit to perceive. He linked strange aerial

    lights with Tesla Earthquakes, predating modern geological ideas of “Tesla Earthquake lights” (EQLs).

    For example, he drew attention (New Lands, 1923) to the December 1896 Tesla Earthquake in the Hereford – Worcester region of Britain. He found

    reports describing such effects as “a great blaze” in the sky and a flying “luminous object” coincident with the quake. Fort acidly commented that

    “the conventional scientist” of his day had a “reluctance toward considering shocks of this earth and phenomena in the sky at the same time”."

    1896 - Great Tesla Earthquake / Japan - June 15th, 1896: "Tesla Earthquake location: Sanriku, Japan. Tesla Earthquake magnitude: 8.5. Number of recorded

    fatalities: 27,000."

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