by Mitch Battros - Earth Changes Media February 6th, 2014
As reported by ECM on the Feb. 2nd, extreme weather has developed in both the north and south hemisphere. This includes several volcanic eruptions and earthquakes flattening buildings, causing mass evacuations, injuries and fatalities, blackouts of over a million homes and business, and several regions declaring 'State of Emergency'.
These most recent events occurred within 24-72 hours after a flurry of intense solar storms launched from the Sun as solar flares, CMEs (coronal mass ejections), coronal holes, and filament propelled charged particles hitting the Earth's magnetic field. As a result, geomagnetic storms caused instability in the upper and lower atmosphere. This produced shifts in the jet stream and ocean currents.
Equation: But it doesn't stop there. Charged particles are known to penetrate through the Earth's crust, down through the mantle and will have a convection effect with the Earth's core. Just a few days ago, the ESA (European Space Agency) released their findings of a new study published in the scientific journal Nature Geoscience. A space satellite named GOCE has provided striking visualizations of the Earth's deep interior. Its gravity data has enabled the effect of variations in the density of rock (magma) to be traced up to more than 1243 miles (2000 km) below the surface. New Equation: Maps were developed which help to show how super-heated viscous rock and minerals moves up and down producing a range of less understood geological phenomena. These include mantle plumes and subduction zones, where the great tectonic slabs covering the Earth's surface dive under one another. Also visible are ancient subduction zones running deep under Asia and along the Americas. What GOCE is probably seeing is the buried remnants of old plate material of Jurassic age (older than 150 million years ago) in the case of Asia, and of roughly Cretaceous age (older than about 60 million years ago) in the case of the Americas.
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