Thanks to John DiNardo...
This alert is from Ann Morrison, a noted scientist/engineer.
*Opinion*: The magnitude 6.1 earthquake on March 19, 2013 03 29 00
occurred near a triple junction of the South America, Antarctica, and
Scottia tectonic plates near the Cape of Good Hope. It occurred at a
depth of 20 miles and no tsunami watch or warning was given was given.
Any earthquake near a triple junction, especially those near the poles,
deserves attention because of its impact on more than two plates and the
impact on spin axis orientation. Below and attached are maps of the
earthquake location.
Look what happened at the north end of the Atlantic Ridge:
DATE_TIME LAT LON DEP MAG
MT SC
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
2013-03-20 11:18:16.51 58.913 -34.249 10.0 4.6 mb us
2013-03-20 11:02:17.06 58.368 -32.020 9.9 4.8 mb us
2013-03-20 10:55:06.31 58.321 -32.056 10.0 4.6 mb us
2013-03-20 10:51:39.90 58.370 -31.991 10.0 4.6 mb us
2013-03-19 05:41:59.07 55.654 -35.117 10.0 4.9 mb us
So we have 58 latitude south with a 6.1 magnitude earthquake, then a
five moderate earthquakes at 58 latitude north! What connects these
earthquakes near Iceland (think near Eyjafjallajokull Volcano in
Iceland) with a large earthquake near Antarctica? The answer is the
Atlantic Ridge that forms the boundary between the North and South
America Tectonic Plates and the Eurasian and African plates. The Vernal
Equinox occurred on 20 March 2013 at 0509 UT. This equinox triggered an
excellent aurora borealis display, and there is anecdotal evidence that
the equinox can trigger earthquakes and volcanoes. Below and attached
are the orbit diagrams for Panstarrs L4 and Lemmon F6 comets, which do
not seem to be close enough to earth to have impacts on earthquakes.
www.homeland-defense4u.com
ANN M. MORRISON
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