Posted on 02/19/2018 6:14:36 PM PST by SunkenCiv
"There's nothing to be afraid of, eh?"
"12 World Secrets That We Will Never Know The Truth About, eh?"
I had not thought about the earthquake. There are numerous reports of lights in the sky following earthquakes.
A quartz crystal will produce a stable RF signal due to the piezoelectric effect. Stressed rocks in a fault zone also produce RF EM discharge. This presumably interacts with the air above the fault, or the gas discharged during the earthquake to produce a glow in the night sky.
I can understand the hydrate release associated with the earthquake. Would pressurized bubbles make it to the surface intact? Would the bubbles glow as they approach the surface and expanded? Or would the gas simply be absorbed into the water as it rose?
I assume that the gas makes it to the surface and will glow at that point. Does the EM Radiation make it through the water and cause the glow? Interesting questions.
They’d have to ignite in the presence of at least some oxygen.
What we see of the body is largely made up of laid blocks, some of which go back to pharaonic times; the paws in particular are not carved out of the bedrock. The name "sphinx derives from a distorted Greek translation of the Egyptian word shesep-anhk, 'living image'..." [Miroslav Verner, "The Pyramids", p 237)
After Thutmose IV cleared away the sand during the 18th dynasty he memorialized his own effort with the Dream Stele. [snip] From that point on the cult of the Sphinx -- which was called Haremakhet, "Horus in the horizon" (Greek Harmachis) -- rapidly grew in significance. [/snip, ibid]
http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2013/04/what-causes-will-o-the-wisps/
“It is believed that, as the gases rise from the soil and water and escape into the atmosphere, the methane mixes with the phosphines and creates the blue lights seen hovering over the swamps. Phosphines are flammable, toxic gasses that can burst into spontaneous flame in the presence of air. As it burns, it produces a dense white cloud, which could give the flame more substance. Mixed with methane, the effect is the Will-o-the-Wisps that inspired so many stories.”
Hydrates would explain the methane, but the lights in the photo here were red.
From:
“Some fireballs appear to be the products of living organisms. The decay of organic matter, for example, in marshes and other wetlands (or even a mass grave in a Polish forest) leads to the release of methane and phosphorus-containing gases such as phosphine, which can spontaneously catch fire after encountering oxygen in the atmosphere, producing a flickering light suspended midair. Some, on the other hand, are electrical in origin, sparking within the ground during an earthquake as stressed rocks release a stream of electrons to the surface where, interacting with air, they produce flashes of light. Still others form in the atmosphere, usually during thunderstorms, and go by the name of ball lightning.
Ball lightning comes in most colors of the rainbow and ranges in sizefrom a typical toy marble, to those extra large exercise balls some people sit on instead of office chairs. It can form inside closed spaces and move down chimneys and horizontally through closed windows. In addition to producing light, ball lightning can give off sparks and is associated with hissing or buzzing noises and a strong, irritating odor. It typically lasts for only seconds, glowing with the intensity of a bright household light bulb. The unpredictable and variable nature of ball lightning has made it difficult to develop a conclusive theory explaining how it works, but accounts of its strangeness are numerous and have been published for centuries.
Lithium or strontium chloride could produce red color. Sodium chloride produces yellow. Humm.
So, earthquake with hydrate release and ball lightning on the ocean surface over multiple release points. Epi-seismic ball lightning.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.