As mentioned in other posts on this site, I have observed a relationship between geologic electromagnetic frequencies and the weather. In areas where the earth emits ultra-low frequency EMFs, such as along geologic fault lines, I had observed, on a global scale, that within a short time of an earthquake, during which EMF emissions are reset to zero, an atmospheric disturbance, such as a tornado, hurricane, or tropical storm would occur.
I hypothesize that the absence of geologic EMFs creates a vacuum and nature abhors a vacuum. The result? Atmospheric disturbances bring ultra-low EMFs to fill the void. Unfortunately, these disturbances can be destructive.
While living in Fort Collins, Colorado, I observed that man-made fault lines that are a result of the fracking process appear to release the same ultra-low EMFs that are released from natural fault lines.
I am sensitive to these frequencies and experience physical symptoms. This is all documented in Riding the Waves: Diagnosing, Treating, and Living with EMF Sensitivity.
There is evidence that fracking causes earthquakes. What about severe weather?
I noticed that the weather in areas with high concentrations of fracking was unusually severe. I was able to superimpose a map of some of the most devastating weather related incidents atop a fracking map, revealing a match in locations.
Perhaps the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is beginning to notice?
http://news.yahoo.com/thunderstorms-could-ozone-factories-160806208.html
From the article:
The Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) experiment, which begins in mid-May, is the first to take a comprehensive look at the chemistry and thunderstorm details, including air movement, cloud physics and electrical activity.
Cloud physics and electrical activity? Could they be referring to Electromagnetic (EMF) activity?
The experiment will examine the influence of thunderstorms on air just beneath the stratosphere, a little-explored region that influences Earth’s climate and weather patterns.
I’m guessing at least part of this region is the area where the vacuum is created.
The internal structures of thunderstorms — and the lightning that accompanies them — differ considerably across the country.
Yes, I’ve noticed it’s incredibly severe where there is a high concentration of fracking activity. See Fracking, EMFs, and the weather.
The DC3 investigators will be based at three sites in northern Alabama, northeastern Colorado and central Oklahoma to west Texas.
Interesting locations. All areas with high concentrations of fracking close enough to have a direct EMF effect.
When I saw the article about rare night tornadoes in Colorado, I had to wonder. How much longer will such events remain rare given the explosion of oil and gas exploration that utilizes the process of fracking?
Sin City = Haunted City. All Caelin Montgomery wanted was a vacation. It wasn’t turning out that way. If it wasn’t noisy hotel guests keeping her up, it was noisy ghosts, one of which was just way too sexy.
It’s bad enough that Camden Reyes’ life was cut short, but his greedy uncle made it look like a suicide, destroying the singer-photographer’s reputation while at the same time profiting from it. When Caelin Montgomery shows up in his hotel room and can see and hear him, his desire for revenge is stoked, along with the fires of passion.
In love with the same woman. Mark Reyolds, manager at the Pacific Institute for Paranormal Research is on a working vacation. When his interest in a beautiful woman lands him right in the middle of the supernatural, he learns that investigating the paranormal is better than being at the center of it. Still, there is Caelin…
The Saguaro Cactus, which is found exclusively in the Sonoran Desert, has beautiful white flowers near the tops of the stems and arms. They are white in color and about 3 inches (8cm) in diameter.
These flowers have a very short timeframe in which to be pollinated. This is because they bloom less than a day…at least they used to.
Opening after dark, Saguaro flowers rely on bats for nighttime pollination. During the day, the flowers are pollinated by bees and birds. After pollination, the flower matures into a bright red fruit, a source of food and moisture for desert animals. Continue reading