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2012年10月8日星期一

因著Planet X 的接近剛去30天,全球錄得7,000個以上地震記錄 EARTHQUAKE ALERT


因著Planet X 的接近剛去30天,全球錄得7,000個以上地震記錄 EARTHQUAKE ALERT

2012 ‧真相: 2012真相‧剛去30天,全球錄得7,000個以上地震記錄 
EARTHQUAKE ALERT:

EARTHQUAKE ALERT: The earth has induced 7163 earthquakes 
in the past 30 days, This could be a warning for the coming weeks!
-TK

因著Planet X 的接近.....




















「Planet X」對地球的影響已經出現,因「Planet X」接近的巨大引力,
導致地震越來越頻繁!


美國
ALERT!!! Over 250+ Earthquakes have Rocked Southern California/
Mexico Border in the last 3 hours!



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

日本政府更作出驚人預測
Janpan
http://news.sina.com.hk/news/12/1/1/2758591/1.html

據日本NHK報道,日本政府29日公佈預測:南海海溝將在2012年冬至左右
發生大地震,最多可能造成關東以西30都府縣32.3萬人喪生,
房屋倒塌238萬餘棟。日本政府正加緊研究特別法案以應對最嚴重情況。
目前NHK已經打斷了正常的節目播出,播報“大地震防火減災對策”特別節目,
提醒民衆做好防範。


















而日本9月1日更作出全國地震演習
http://hk.news.yahoo.com/%E6%97%A540%E8%90%AC%E4%BA%BA%E6%BC%94%E7%BF%92%E5%9C%B0%E9%9C%87-212101483.html

明報 – 2012年9月2日星期日上午5:21
【明報專訊】日本昨日舉行全國防災演習,模擬發生強烈地震,
有近40萬人參加。為配合演習,駐日美國海軍C12運輸機昨日從神奈川縣的
厚木基地飛抵東京羽田機場,這是1952年美軍將羽田機場歸還日本後,
美軍運輸機首次在該機場着陸。

9月1日是日本的防災日,日本政府假想東京發生7.3級直下型地震,
全國40個都府縣舉行了大規模防災演習。在東京,參與演習的市民打破牆壁,
救出被困者,又進行各項綜合防災演習,包括滅火及清除壓着車輛的雜物。
東京都政府同時封閉120條道路,演習疏導交通。
內閣成員昨早走路到首相官邸,由首相野田佳彥主持緊急災害對策會議。
穿着防災服的野田之後又乘坐直升機到橫濱參加防災演習。

美軍首派C12參與

駐日美軍昨日首次派出大型運輸機C12參與演習。C12運輸機從厚木基地飛抵
東京羽田機場,着陸後模擬將所運的救援物資裝入日本陸上自衛隊車輛的步驟。
這是美運輸機時隔60年重返東京機場。

在上周三,日本政府發表研究報告,指萬一太平洋發生9級大地震,
觸發的34米高(約11層樓高度)海嘯將會導致日本32.3萬人死亡。

2012年9月25日星期二

2012‧真相 ~ 全球出現「地鳴」現象 STRANGE SOUNDS HEARD WORLDWIDE 2011/2012

STRANGE SOUNDS AUG-SEPT 2012
發生於2012年八月至九月的「地鳴」記錄



哥林多前書15:52 
就在一霎時,眨眼之間,號筒末次吹響的時候 因號筒要響,死人要復活成為不朽壞的,我們也要改變。

Corinthians 15:52 English Standard Version (ESV) 52 
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised imperishable, and we shall be changed

近年,全球多地出現被形容為「吹號聲」的「地鳴」現象,
是因為「Planet X」之逼近,導致地向天產生放電,導致發出如「吹號聲」的怪聲。

其實,「Planet X」上一次來臨,正是摩西帶領以色列人出埃及的時候,
當時,摩西帶領以色列人進到曠野,在「五旬節」當日,從西乃山上傳出吹號聲,無獨有偶,今次「Planet X」即將來臨,全球各地亦不謀而合地傳出吹號聲,或被稱為「地鳴」的異常現象。

參考埃及百科全書Kolbrin Bible的記載:



2012年,這些事件再次發生於人類歷史當中,印證「Planet X」即將來臨。

People all over the world are claiming to hear strange noises in the sky. While some of these claims are obvious hoaxes, is there something strange going on? 



Strange trumpet sound from sky, Sept. 4 2012 Alberta Canada
最新新聞 2012年九月四日發生於加拿大



Strange Sounds in the Sky Norway September 5 2012 
2012年九月四日發生於挪威

2012年9月16日星期日

因Planet X接近引發的災難 總結2010年度的異常災難


Planet X接近引發的災難      總結2010年度的異常災難

當Planet X(這顆太陽系中不知名的第十行星)將於2012年逼近地球時,
屆時它將引發2012年前後的3至5年,有全球性災難及地球引力擾亂等現象出現。

事實上,當PlanetX來到時,為甚麼我說出這麼多現象呢?
原因是Planet X出現時,正如恐佈電影,它不但產生一件災害,
這才是可怕之處,猶如摩西十災時,再加上幾倍級數。
並且這不是發生於一天的事,它好像一宗嚴重的飛機空難事件,
以慢速鏡頭播放那樣,它會是一個三至五年的災禍。



短片總結2010年水災、洪災、旱災、反常天氣(嚴寒、高溫)、暴雪、動物群死。
究竟我們的地球,是否因Planet X的接近而被影響,令天氣、海洋、火山、
地震與生態都急速轉變?


如果以上的災難真的由Planet X引發,那麼2011年內的災難必比2010年的更加嚴重。

  下篇再續。










~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

時至今日篇2011130


影片播放日期:11123

2012年9月13日星期四

2012‧真相 ~ Planet X 逼近! 地球氣候出現異常變化 Planet X make the Summer of 2012 -- Too Hot

Planet X逼近,地球氣候出現異常變化,
甚至出現一日內出現了四季天氣


一些地區,因著極度酷熱天氣,
部份地區出現「沒有春天」的氣候,由冬季直接跳入夏季。

Planet X 引力對地球所造成的影響



踏入2012年,美國持續出現異常暖和與及高溫天氣,
美國氣候科學家宣佈2012年1月已成為自1776年以來,
史上第四個最暖和的1月冬季。

通常,美國全國3月的平均氣溫是華氏42.5度,
但今年平均氣溫卻是51.1度。

由於今天春天出現氣溫持續偏高,雨水偏少的異常天氣,
令美國農業存在極大隱憂。

踏入2012年7月,熱浪襲擊全美,全美三分一人受影響,
2012年8月12日,美國國家海洋及大氣管理局更公佈最新報告指出,
全美本土48州,今年7月的平均氣溫打破76年前的攝氏24.6度紀錄,
比本世紀平均溫度還要高出攝氏1.7度,是美國史上最熱的一個月。

沒有雨水加上酷熱天氣導致地土裂開,甚至燒焦變焦土,
農作物收成將出現災難性後果!

另一方面,異常乾旱氣候橫掃全球三大州農田,包括北美州、亞洲和歐洲,導致全球農作物生產出現重大危機,助長糧食危機,導致糧食價格再創新高。



http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2012/03aug_summer2012/

The Summer of 2012 -- Too Hot to Handle?

August 3, 2012: This past June more than 170 all-time US heat records were tied or broken--many of them originally set in the historically hotter months of July and August. And with a drought plaguing much of the country, the ground is as dry and crispy as a saltine cracker. 

By early July, 56% of the contiguous U.S. was experiencing drought. That's the largest percentage in the 12-year record of the U.S. Drought Monitor. Fires scorched over 1.3 million acres across the US in June, reducing hundreds of homes to ashes in the West. 

Just imagining prospects for the rest of the summer is enough to bring sweat to your brow. And last winter is partly to blame. 

"799 daytime heat records were broken in the first five days of January in the US," says Jake Crouch, a climate scientist from the NOAA National Climatic Data Center. "Last year's was the fourth warmest winter since 1895. And it was dry, with a dearth of snowfall in many places. During most of this past winter and spring, a positive North Atlantic Oscillation pressure pattern kept the jet stream further north and the US warmer and drier than normal." 

With little moisture in the soil to evaporate and dissipate some of the sun's energy, more solar radiation is converted to sensible heat, he says.


Of course global warming is on the tips of many tongues. 

"CO2 is up from 280 parts per million in the 19th century atmosphere to almost 400 parts per million now -- a 43% increase," says NASA climatologist Bill Patzert. "We're emitting six times more carbon from fossil fuel use now than we did 50 years ago. Atmospheric CO2 hasn't been this high in 400,000 years." 

Greenhouse gasses like CO2 and methane have higher heat capacities than many other gasses, causing the atmosphere to retain more heat. 

"The atmosphere becomes a heat source itself, radiating heat back onto the Earth. 85 to 90% of that heat is absorbed by the oceans, because water has a high heat capacity. So the oceans expand and rise. Global sea levels have risen 8 inches over the past 130 years, and the average surface temperature of the entire earth (land surface temperatures plus ocean temperatures) has increased 1.6 °F. These facts," he asserts, "are unequivocal proof of global warming." 

But is the record-setting summer 2012 evidence of climate change? 


Previous heat waves in the 1930s contributed to the "dust bowl" phenomenon. In this picture, a dust storm approaches Stratford, Texas, in 1935. Credit: NOAA George E. Marsh Album "Not necessarily," says Patzert. "We've always had extreme weather. US history is written in great natural calamities -- tornadoes, hurricanes, heat waves, droughts, floods. Global warming is happening, but it would be irresponsible to say that this heat wave and all these broken records are due to global warming from human causes. It's just not that simple." 

John Christy, a scientist from the University of Alabama in Huntsville, agrees: "Heat waves are a natural part of the climate system, and while the recent heat wave was remarkable, it was not as intense as others in the past." 

He offers a few examples of past heat waves and droughts. 

"The central US suffered several heat waves in the 1930s -- the dust bowl years -- when more statewide, all-time record high temperatures were set than in any other decade. And the western US experienced decades-long droughts in the 12th century. So dry were mountain areas that we can still see near-hundred-year-old trees standing upright in the bottom of alpine lakes where they grew on dry ground 900 years ago.1 This shows that in the 12th century it was so dry and hot that the lakes dried up and allowed trees to grow over a significant period before moisture finally returned." 

Patzert and Christy are on opposite sides of the global warming debate. Patzert firmly believes that Earth is warming up and humans are the main reason why. Christy, on the other hand, argues that natural climate variations are almost solely to blame. Yet they both agree that the summer 2012 weather might be just that – weather. They also both believe that improvement is needed in models indicating effects of human and other factors on weather and climate. 

"Today's climate models are extremely sophisticated, constantly improving, and will be crucial to charting our future -- but they aren't perfect," says Patzert. 

One component that needs improvement: clouds. 

"Clouds play a key role in climate because they affect the amount of sunlight reflected and absorbed," says Christy. "We need higher resolution models to portray them more accurately. The distance between grid measurement points in current models is too great to capture meter to meter variations in clouds, land cover, and other variables that affect climate." 

One more point of agreement: the summer of 2012 is too hot to handle.

2012年9月11日星期二

2012‧真相 ~ Planet X迫近!Earthquakes ! Pay Attention on 25 - 26 Sep 2012 地球、太陽和Planet X相隔188日連珠便引發大地震,預測2012年9月25日 ~ 26日有可能將有大地震!

Planet X是在一個軌跡上呈拋物線逼近地球,
每當Planet X與地球和太陽連成一直線時,便會觸發大地震。

10年2月27日智利8.8級大地震、
10年9月4日基督城大地震、
11年311日本大地震,
11年9月15日太平洋島國斐濟發生的7.3級大地震,
便是因為Planet X與地球和太陽連成一直線而引發。

Japan 日本 311





無獨有偶,這四次大地震也出現相距188日的週期,
按這個週期去預測,下一個週期便是12年3月22日左右,
將會出現如以上數個級數的大地震。

結果,就在3月22日左右,地球多處發生六級或以上的大地震,其中墨西哥南部更發生7.6級地震、智利發生7.2級地震:

包括2012年3月21日,墨西哥南部發生7.6級地震:



2012年3月26日,智利發生7.2級地震:



那麼,下一次出現大地震的時間,亦是188日之後,
有可能就是2012年9月25至26日左右,地球、太陽和Planet X會再次出現連珠。



如果到了2012年9月25至26日,地球真的再次發生大地震的話,
正意味著人類很快可憑肉眼看見Planet X!

「Planet X」對地球的影響已經出現,因「Planet X」接近的巨大引力,導致地震越來越頻繁!

Planet X逼近,地球氣候出現異常變化,
甚至出現一日內出現了四季天氣


一些地區,因著極度酷熱天氣,
部份地區出現「沒有春天」的氣候,由冬季直接跳入夏季。

Planet X 引力對地球所造成的影響



踏入2012年,美國持續出現異常暖和與及高溫天氣,
美國氣候科學家宣佈2012年1月已成為自1776年以來,
史上第四個最暖和的1月冬季。

通常,美國全國3月的平均氣溫是華氏42.5度,
但今年平均氣溫卻是51.1度。

由於今天春天出現氣溫持續偏高,雨水偏少的異常天氣,
令美國農業存在極大隱憂。

踏入2012年7月,熱浪襲擊全美,全美三分一人受影響,
2012年8月12日,美國國家海洋及大氣管理局更公佈最新報告指出,
全美本土48州,今年7月的平均氣溫打破76年前的攝氏24.6度紀錄,
比本世紀平均溫度還要高出攝氏1.7度,是美國史上最熱的一個月。

沒有雨水加上酷熱天氣導致地土裂開,甚至燒焦變焦土,
農作物收成將出現災難性後果!

另一方面,異常乾旱氣候橫掃全球三大州農田,包括北美州、亞洲和歐洲,導致全球農作物生產出現重大危機,助長糧食危機,導致糧食價格再創新高。



http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2012/03aug_summer2012/

The Summer of 2012 -- Too Hot to Handle?

August 3, 2012: This past June more than 170 all-time US heat records were tied or broken--many of them originally set in the historically hotter months of July and August. And with a drought plaguing much of the country, the ground is as dry and crispy as a saltine cracker. 

By early July, 56% of the contiguous U.S. was experiencing drought. That's the largest percentage in the 12-year record of the U.S. Drought Monitor. Fires scorched over 1.3 million acres across the US in June, reducing hundreds of homes to ashes in the West. 

Just imagining prospects for the rest of the summer is enough to bring sweat to your brow. And last winter is partly to blame. 

"799 daytime heat records were broken in the first five days of January in the US," says Jake Crouch, a climate scientist from the NOAA National Climatic Data Center. "Last year's was the fourth warmest winter since 1895. And it was dry, with a dearth of snowfall in many places. During most of this past winter and spring, a positive North Atlantic Oscillation pressure pattern kept the jet stream further north and the US warmer and drier than normal." 

With little moisture in the soil to evaporate and dissipate some of the sun's energy, more solar radiation is converted to sensible heat, he says.


Of course global warming is on the tips of many tongues. 

"CO2 is up from 280 parts per million in the 19th century atmosphere to almost 400 parts per million now -- a 43% increase," says NASA climatologist Bill Patzert. "We're emitting six times more carbon from fossil fuel use now than we did 50 years ago. Atmospheric CO2 hasn't been this high in 400,000 years." 

Greenhouse gasses like CO2 and methane have higher heat capacities than many other gasses, causing the atmosphere to retain more heat. 

"The atmosphere becomes a heat source itself, radiating heat back onto the Earth. 85 to 90% of that heat is absorbed by the oceans, because water has a high heat capacity. So the oceans expand and rise. Global sea levels have risen 8 inches over the past 130 years, and the average surface temperature of the entire earth (land surface temperatures plus ocean temperatures) has increased 1.6 °F. These facts," he asserts, "are unequivocal proof of global warming." 

But is the record-setting summer 2012 evidence of climate change? 


Previous heat waves in the 1930s contributed to the "dust bowl" phenomenon. In this picture, a dust storm approaches Stratford, Texas, in 1935. Credit: NOAA George E. Marsh Album "Not necessarily," says Patzert. "We've always had extreme weather. US history is written in great natural calamities -- tornadoes, hurricanes, heat waves, droughts, floods. Global warming is happening, but it would be irresponsible to say that this heat wave and all these broken records are due to global warming from human causes. It's just not that simple." 

John Christy, a scientist from the University of Alabama in Huntsville, agrees: "Heat waves are a natural part of the climate system, and while the recent heat wave was remarkable, it was not as intense as others in the past." 

He offers a few examples of past heat waves and droughts. 

"The central US suffered several heat waves in the 1930s -- the dust bowl years -- when more statewide, all-time record high temperatures were set than in any other decade. And the western US experienced decades-long droughts in the 12th century. So dry were mountain areas that we can still see near-hundred-year-old trees standing upright in the bottom of alpine lakes where they grew on dry ground 900 years ago.1 This shows that in the 12th century it was so dry and hot that the lakes dried up and allowed trees to grow over a significant period before moisture finally returned." 

Patzert and Christy are on opposite sides of the global warming debate. Patzert firmly believes that Earth is warming up and humans are the main reason why. Christy, on the other hand, argues that natural climate variations are almost solely to blame. Yet they both agree that the summer 2012 weather might be just that – weather. They also both believe that improvement is needed in models indicating effects of human and other factors on weather and climate. 

"Today's climate models are extremely sophisticated, constantly improving, and will be crucial to charting our future -- but they aren't perfect," says Patzert. 

One component that needs improvement: clouds. 

"Clouds play a key role in climate because they affect the amount of sunlight reflected and absorbed," says Christy. "We need higher resolution models to portray them more accurately. The distance between grid measurement points in current models is too great to capture meter to meter variations in clouds, land cover, and other variables that affect climate." 

One more point of agreement: the summer of 2012 is too hot to handle.