The Strange Sound Being Heard Around The World Redux: The Menominee Crack Revisited, page
Pages:
ATS Members have flagged this thread 9 times
Topic started on 11-1-2012 @ 09:51 AM by this_is_who_we_are
The Strange Sound Being Heard Around The World Redux: The Menominee Crack Revisited

Strange Roaring Noise In Northern Michigan - Light Show Too!
www.abovetopsecret.com...
by OldCorp
started on 1/10/2012 @ 08:51 PM

I don't know if there have been reports of unexplained fissures opening in other areas where the sound has been reported. There may be a connection. There may not be a connection. Just thought I'd mention it for your consideration.

Coordinates:

45°12'48.44"N
87°35'15.57"W

Earth Changes?Unexplained Crevice Appears in Michigan
www.abovetopsecret.com...

Originally posted by PatriotsPride

Earth Changes?Unexplained Crevice Appears in Michigan


theintelhub.com
A large crevice,stretching almost two football fields,suddenly appeared in the wood near Birch Creek.
MENOMINEE TOWNSHIP-It's a geological phenomenon that has both authorities and Menominee Township residents scratching their heads.
(visit the link for the full news article)

edit on 7-10-2010 by PatriotsPride because: I misspelled earth


Unexplained Crack Splits UP Backyard
www.fox11online.com...

Unexplained Crack Splits UP Backyard
Updated: Wednesday, 06 Oct 2010, 11:11 AM CDT
Published : Tuesday, 05 Oct 2010, 9:36 PM CDT

BIRCH CREEK, Mich. - A Michigan family's property has a sudden unexplained divide.

A large unexplained crack now runs 200 yards through the Salewsky family's property, eight miles north of Menominee in Birch Creek.

The family thinks it happened yesterday around 9:00 in the morning. The ground raised five feet up, taking trees along for the ride.

Some cracks were up two feet wide and five feet deep.

"The house shook, the chairs shook," Doug Salewsky said. "The logs weren't there when I piled them."

Salewsky doesn't know what caused his backyard to split in two and neither do police.

There have been no recent reports of any earthquakes in the area.

People specializing in geological surveying are being called in to try and explain the phenomenon.
www.fox11online.com...



www.freerepublic.com...

The Menominee Crack
www.geo.mtu.edu...

On Monday morning, 04 October 2010, a large noise and shaking were observed in a small area north of the town of Menominee, in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The following day, a local resident returned to the site of a fallen tree that was being removed for firewood, and observed a large crack in the ground. This feature was reported to local officials, who contacted Michigan Tech, and the news media.

On Sunday, 09 October, Dr Wayne Pennington, Chair of the Department of Geological and Mining Engineering and Sciences of Michigan Technological University, visited the site (figure 1 and figure 2). The following is a report of observations and tentative conclusions...
www.geo.mtu.edu...

(see article for more)





Location Of Fissure:

edit on 1/11/2012 by this_is_who_we_are because: typos and OldCorp thread link



reply posted on 11-1-2012 @ 10:34 AM by this_is_who_we_are
This may be of interest as well:

The Niagara Escarpment

An escarpment is a steep slope or long cliff that occurs from erosion or faulting and separates two relatively level areas of differing elevations.

Most commonly, an escarpment is a transition from one series of sedimentary rocks to another series of a different age and composition. When sedimentary beds are tilted and exposed to the surface, erosion and weathering may occur differentially based on the composition. Less resistant rocks will erode faster, retreating until the point they are overlain by more resistant rock (see cross section schematic). When the dip of the bedding is gentle, a cuesta is formed. Steeper dips (greater than 30-40°)[2] form hogbacks.
Escarpments are also frequently formed by faults. When a fault displaces the ground surface so that one side is higher than the other, a fault scarp is created. This can occur in dip-slip faults, or when a strike-slip fault brings a piece of high ground adjacent to an area of lower ground.

en.wikipedia.org...





The red half-circle denotes the Niagara Escarpment, a geologically active fault zone. Menominee is just about at 11 o-clock on the half-circle.
www.macombdaily.com...
en.wikipedia.org...:Niagara_Escarpment_map.png


Niagara Escarpment
en.wikipedia.org...

The Niagara Escarpment is a long escarpment, or cuesta, in the United States and Canada that runs westward from New York State, through Ontario, Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois. It is composed of the Lockport geological formation of Silurian age, and is similar to the Onondaga geological formation, which runs parallel to it and just to the south, through western New York and southern Ontario. The escarpment is most famous as the cliff over which the Niagara River plunges at Niagara Falls, for which it is named.
The Niagara Escarpment is the most prominent of several escarpments formed in the bedrock of the Great Lakes basin. From its easternmost point near Watertown, New York[1], the escarpment shapes in part the individual basins and landforms of Lakes Ontario, Huron and Michigan. In Rochester, New York, there are three waterfalls over the escarpment where the Genesee River flows through the city. The escarpment thence runs westward to the Niagara River forming a deep gorge north of Niagara Falls, which itself cascades over the escarpment. In southern Ontario it spans the Niagara Peninsula, closely following the Lake Ontario shore through the cities of St. Catharines, Hamilton and Dundas, where it takes a sharp turn north in the town of Milton toward Georgian Bay. It then follows the Georgian Bay shore northwestwards to form the spine of the Bruce Peninsula and Manitoulin Island, as well as several smaller islands located in northern Lake Huron where it turns westwards into the Upper Peninsula of northern Michigan, south of Sault Ste. Marie. It then extends southwards into Wisconsin following the Door Peninsula through the Bayshore Blufflands and then more inland from the western coast of Lake Michigan and Milwaukee ending northwest of Chicago near the Wisconsin-Illinois border.
en.wikipedia.org...
edit on 1/11/2012 by this_is_who_we_are because: typos



reply posted on 11-1-2012 @ 11:04 AM by this_is_who_we_are
Some atribute the sound to fracking. Others say it's the sound of cloaked hovering alien craft. I like to think it's cloaked alien craft myself. Seriously.

But for balance, here are a couple of links on fracking in Michigan.

Fracking In Michigan Appears On The Upswing
www.crainsdetroit.com...#
Originally Published: May 27, 2011 11:25 AM Modified: June 01, 2011 4:01 PM


“Fracking” Gas Companies Target Northern Michigan
glenarborsun.com...
published June 30, 2010
By Eartha Melzer
Sun contributor

As natural gas companies prepare to prospect in northern Michigan, experts are warning landowners to be careful about selling off mineral rights.

When the state took in an all-time record $178 million in a mineral rights auction back in May, it became apparent that natural gas companies see new opportunities in a shale formation that lies like a bowl under much of northwest-lower Michigan.

Up until May gas companies had been offering landowners around $150 per acre for mineral rights, but when bidding against each other for the right to drill on state land, the companies were willing to pay far more — an average of about $1,500 per acre. One parcel in Charlevoix County went for $5,500 per acre.
glenarborsun.com...


This is the only map I could find of Michigan’s current frack wells. I didn't do a thorough search though. In addition, the site does not give a source for their map on their webpage but I tracked it down to:
www.michigan.gov...


banmichiganfracking.org...
edit on 1/11/2012 by this_is_who_we_are because: typo, duplicate link



reply posted on 11-1-2012 @ 04:21 PM by facchino
Can anyone add to this thread please- trying to track these things in one place and build a bigger picture

Cheers



reply posted on 12-1-2012 @ 07:37 AM by DaarkSyde2012
reply to post by StealthyKat



Great idea, how about it mods? Can you create a main group in Fragile earth for the fracking issue?
Pages:     ^^TOP^^



An unusual tree called Jaboticaba
  Posted 8 days ago with 77 member flags
Haunting pics of abandoned cities around the world
  Posted 4 days ago with 63 member flags
The Mysterious Socotra Island (Must See!)
  Posted 2 days ago with 63 member flags
Strange Sounds (UK) published on youtube on 5/13/2012
  Posted 17 days ago with 53 member flags
Pole Shift Data You Shouldn\'t Ignore
  Posted 14 days ago with 46 member flags