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Originally posted by novemberecho
reply to post by Ben81
.......****.
THATS WHERE I'M GOING.
I'll keep you guys updated when I get there
Originally posted by Saucerwench
reply to post by TryToGetTheTruth
THANK YOU TRY, thanks so much, I can't believe you found Stacy back on Youtube again. Got his own channel up there once again I see. OMG omg, I thought I'd never see him again, he was so unique.
Originally posted by Ben81
A big Earthquake will happen directly below the town of Wisconsin
Originally posted by mwood
Originally posted by Ben81
A big Earthquake will happen directly below the town of Wisconsin
You do know Wisconsin is a state.......not a town.,,,,,,,right?
Originally posted by PuterMan
reply to post by xZodiacx
If an 8.0+ hits wisconsin, I am fearing for my life as I feel that an earthquake in our general region would split the Great Lakes and drain their water into the crevices of the earthquake. Is this scenario possible?
In a nutshell no. And in more detail - NO.
Gaping crevices going down thousands of feet is the stuff of films, not of reality.
Originally posted by PatriotsPride
Earth Changes?Unexplained Crevice Appears in Michigan
theintelhub.com
(visit the link for the full news article)
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.
edit on 7-10-2010 by PatriotsPride because: I misspelled earth
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...
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...
Originally posted by skepticconwatcher
reply to post by Ben81
NOTHING HAPPENED
So..........
FICTION: The earth will open and swallow a train, my car, my town, or me
FACT: A popular literary device is a fault that opens during an earthquake to swallow up an inconvenient character. But unfortunately for principled writers, gaping faults exist only in movies and novels. The ground moves across a fault during an earthquake, not away from it. If the fault could open, there would be no friction. Without friction, there would be no earthquake. Shallow crevasses can form during earthquake-induced landslides, lateral spreads, or other types of ground failures. Faults, however, do not open up during an earthquake.