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Message Subject Partial crustal shift and the Sun / earth , new EARTH UNDER FIRE video pg 116
Poster Handle storm2come
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Glad to see this thread getting more attention S2C. You've got a golden egg here. Keep going with it. Can't link or embed. But last year there was a earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia that caused a massive land movement. Solid earth moving as water(2018 terrifying moving earth). A common misconception of our home planet is that it's shaped like a sphere but it is far from it. Our gravity keeps it congealed. With out that and magnetism this planet is in constant struggle for balance. Given the poles and equator that seem to be constant as well as consistent are not. Everything changes with time
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 14786502

are you talking about the one in Dec. 2018?
 Quoting: storm2come


I believe it was either September or October, when it occurred
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 14786502


ok then your talking about this?

Seismic boom may explain why 2018 Palu earthquake was so devastating
[link to www.newscientist.com (secure)]

More than 2000 people died when an earthquake in Indonesia triggered a tsunami last year. We now have a better idea of why the event was so devastating — Earth’s crust ruptured so quickly that it effectively broke the sound barrier for earthquakes and generated a seismic boom.
An earthquake occurs when stress built up in Earth’s crust literally reaches breaking point, which causes the rock to rupture producing a fault in the crust. The crack begins close to the earthquake’s epicentre and then spreads for potentially hundreds of kilometres, like a tear spreading through a sheet of paper as the two halves are pulled apart.
As the rock ruptures, it sends out shock waves – called shear waves – that radiate out through the crust at around 3.5 kilometres per second. It’s these shock waves that shake the ground and cause the damage and destruction.



But during the Palu earthquake that struck Sulawesi on 28 September 2018, those shock waves seem to have been made even more intense. Two independent teams of geologists have analysed geological data from the quake and think they know why.....

Confirmation that the quake was supershear might help solve the mystery, says Ampuero. The seismic boom it created might have been intense enough to liquefy mud on the ocean floor and trigger underwater landslides with tsunami-generating potential.

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