\"Can animals predict an earthquake? The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Gr...

A

a a

Guest
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.

We can easily explain the cause of unusual animal behavior seconds before humans feel an earthquake. Very few humans notice the smaller P wave that travels the fastest from the earthquake source and arrives before the larger S wave. But many animals with more keen senses are able to feel the P wave seconds before the S wave arrives. As for sensing an impending earthquake days or weeks before it occurs, that\'s a different story.

A once popular theory purported that there was a correlation between Lost Pet ads in the San Jose Mercury News and the dates of earthquakes in the San Francisco Bay area. A thorough statistical analysis of this theory, published in California Geology in 1988, concluded that there was no such correlation, however.

Another paper published in a scientific journal in the U.S. on this subject by a respected scientist in 2000 is summarized here...

The paper poses this question: Is it reasonable for a seismic-escape behavior pattern to evolve, and can such a genetic system be maintained in the face of selection pressures operating on the time scales of damaging seismic events? All animals instinctively respond to escape from predators and to preserve their lives. A wide variety of vertebrates already express “early warning” behaviors that we understand for other types of events, so it’s possible that a seismic-escape response could have evolved from this already-existing genetic predisposal. An instinctive response following a P-wave seconds before a larger S wave is not a “huge leap”, so to speak, but what about other precursors that may occur days or weeks before an earthquake that we don’t yet know about? If in fact there are precursors to a significant earthquake that we have yet to learn about (such as ground tilting, groundwater changes, electrical or magnetic field variations), indeed it’s possible that some animals could sense these signals and connect the perception with an impending earthquake.

However, much research still needs to be done on this subject. The author suggests establishing a baseline behavior pattern that can be compared with reactions of various environmental stimuli, and then testing various potential stimuli in the laboratory. Of course, the presence of these stimuli still needs to be researched with regard to precursory phenomena preceding an earthquake, for if these signals aren’t present in the environment before an earthquake, a connection is irrelevant.
For More Information

Kirschvink, Joseph L. (2000). Earthquake Prediction by Animals: Evolution and Sensory Perception, Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., 90, pp. 312-323.
Quammen, D. (1985). Animals and earthquakes: This World, San Francisco Chronicle, April 21, p. 15-16.
Schaal, Rand B. (1988). An Evaluation of the Animal Behavior Theory for Earthquake Prediction, California Geology, v41, n2.
Yoshiaki Orihara, Masashi Kamogawa, Yoichi Noda, Toshiyasu Nagao; Is Japanese Folklore Concerning Deep‐Sea Fish Appearance a Real Precursor of Earthquakes?. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.

https://www.usgs.gov/programs/earthquake-hazards/animals-earthquake-prediction

Too much theory.
Either animals or humans can sense infrasouds transmitted through the ground

Since animals live outdoor their sense of infrasounds is keep active for the whole life.

Humans live mostly indoor, not exposed to infrasounds transmitted through the ground, outdoor, so the loose the ability to detect and sense infrasounds.

But if you live in infrasound haunted house for all your life
you sense infrasounds in outdoor, like an animal
 
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 15:21:12 UTC+1, a a wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 13:56:17 UTC+1, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.
Really?
And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.
They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection..
The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.
The Arab peninsula\'s tectonic plate gets separated from the land of Turkey,
what can be live watched below

https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/?extent=-4.74068,-353.58398&extent=56.07204,-269.20898&range=week&magnitude=all&listOnlyShown=true

Humans and animals can sense and detect infrasonic vibrations easily if trained in so called infrasound haunted house.

I was born in infrasound haunted house and always sense infrasounds in the air and transmitted through the ground.

So I have joined the largest study by Senate of Australia on infrasounds generated by the wind farms in Australia.

I can provide you with on-line training, instructions on how to detect, sense infrasounds, infrasonicc vibrations with your own body, senses.

If you are interested I can go to USGS
to offer such training world-wide

https://www.usgs.gov/programs/earthquake-hazards/animals-earthquake-prediction
 
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 2:44:57 PM UTC-5, a a wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 15:21:12 UTC+1, a a wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 13:56:17 UTC+1, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.
Really?
And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.
They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection.
The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.
The Arab peninsula\'s tectonic plate gets separated from the land of Turkey,
what can be live watched below

https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/?extent=-4.74068,-353.58398&extent=56.07204,-269.20898&range=week&magnitude=all&listOnlyShown=true
Humans and animals can sense and detect infrasonic vibrations easily if trained in so called infrasound haunted house.

I was born in infrasound haunted house and always sense infrasounds in the air and transmitted through the ground.

So I have joined the largest study by Senate of Australia on infrasounds generated by the wind farms in Australia.

I can provide you with on-line training, instructions on how to detect, sense infrasounds, infrasonicc vibrations with your own body, senses.

Okay, then you can get to the bottom of the big mystery in U.S. consulates in places like Cuba, and find out why everyone is getting sick.

Crickets could be behind the Cuba ‘sonic attack’ mystery, scientists say

https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/07/health/cuba-sonic-attack-crickets-scli-intl/index.html

They can\'t fix that with a billion $$$ expenditure so they\'re not interested in that answer.


If you are interested I can go to USGS
to offer such training world-wide

https://www.usgs.gov/programs/earthquake-hazards/animals-earthquake-prediction
 
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 7:56:17 AM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.
Really?
And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.
They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection.
The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.
And pigs might fly.

You\'re missing the point that brains, in whatever creature, are the original neural network computers. 25 million years is a LOT of data collection. Then you have no idea whatsoever what kind of sensing these creatures posses. There have been studies which determined increased blood pressure and heart rates in alarmed animals. I wouldn\'t put it past them to have the ability to see future time.


--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 21:53:16 UTC+1, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 2:44:57 PM UTC-5, a a wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 15:21:12 UTC+1, a a wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 13:56:17 UTC+1, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.
Really?
And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.
They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection.
The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.
The Arab peninsula\'s tectonic plate gets separated from the land of Turkey,
what can be live watched below

https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/?extent=-4.74068,-353.58398&extent=56.07204,-269.20898&range=week&magnitude=all&listOnlyShown=true
Humans and animals can sense and detect infrasonic vibrations easily if trained in so called infrasound haunted house.

I was born in infrasound haunted house and always sense infrasounds in the air and transmitted through the ground.

So I have joined the largest study by Senate of Australia on infrasounds generated by the wind farms in Australia.

I can provide you with on-line training, instructions on how to detect, sense infrasounds, infrasonicc vibrations with your own body, senses.
Okay, then you can get to the bottom of the big mystery in U.S. consulates in places like Cuba, and find out why everyone is getting sick.

Crickets could be behind the Cuba ‘sonic attack’ mystery, scientists say

https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/07/health/cuba-sonic-attack-crickets-scli-intl/index.html

They can\'t fix that with a billion $$$ expenditure so they\'re not interested in that answer.

If you are interested I can go to USGS
to offer such training world-wide

https://www.usgs.gov/programs/earthquake-hazards/animals-earthquake-prediction

I have studied the Cuban\'s infrasounds case
and infrasounds sensors should be placed around the building, burried in the ground
and another type of infrasound sensors should affixed to the walls, ceilings to generate signatures of infrasonic vibrations.

There is a large power underground UPS system, powered by heavy motors, generating infrasonic vibrations.

If you live in infrasound haunted house since birth you just sense infrasonic vibrations around the wind farms, infrasonic vibrations generated by Diesel motors in old buses, infrasonic vibrations generated on motor ship and get called
\"sea disease\" sick, depending what frequency of your brain waves they match on.

I contacted the consulate immediately via internet and offered my help

So no hidden science, just infrasounds and infrasonic vibrations in < 15Hz range
 
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 22:00:01 UTC+1, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 7:56:17 AM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.
Really?
And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.
They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection..
The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.
And pigs might fly.
You\'re missing the point that brains, in whatever creature, are the original neural network computers. 25 million years is a LOT of data collection. Then you have no idea whatsoever what kind of sensing these creatures posses. There have been studies which determined increased blood pressure and heart rates in alarmed animals. I wouldn\'t put it past them to have the ability to see future time.
If you move from relaxation (10Hz) to alert state (20-25Hz)
youre blood pressure and heart rate get increased by default.

In case of humans and animals, relaxation mode comes with sleep mode.

What matters is your response time to external infrasonic vibrations, switching you from rest to alert mode.

Just place low bass speaker close to the wall or under your bed, covered with pillows to study how infrasounds transfer around your home
and if there are spaces, structures, showing resonant frequencies matching the low bass played, starting to vibrate.
 
On Thursday, February 23, 2023 at 6:44:57 AM UTC+11, a a wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 15:21:12 UTC+1, a a wrote:
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 13:56:17 UTC+1, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.

Really?

And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.

They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection.

The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.

<snip>

> Humans and animals can sense and detect infrasonic vibrations easily if trained in so called infrasound haunted house.

Rubbish. it\'s called infrasound because you can\'t detect it easily or reliably.

> I was born in infrasound haunted house and always sense infrasounds in the air and transmitted through the ground.

A a is an imaginative liar.

> So I have joined the largest study by Senate of Australia on infrasounds generated by the wind farms in Australia.

That makes you a demented lunatic and a time traveller - the inquiry happened in 2015, and was run by a nutcase with an axe to grind.

https://theconversation.com/whats-next-a-senate-inquiry-into-infrasound-from-trees-waves-or-air-conditioners-50902

> I can provide you with on-line training, instructions on how to detect, sense infrasounds, infrasonicc vibrations with your own body, senses.

More accurately, how to convert a sense of inspecific dissatisfaction into an estimate of local infrasound intensity.

> If you are interested I can go to USGS to offer such training world-wide..

And get sued for offering a program that makes neurotic idiots even more anxious.

> https://www.usgs.gov/programs/earthquake-hazards/animals-earthquake-prediction

Which doesn\'t say that animals can detect anything useful.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Thursday, February 23, 2023 at 8:00:01 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 7:56:17 AM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.
Really?
And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.

They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intelligence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection..
The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.

And pigs might fly.

You\'re missing the point that brains, in whatever creature, are the original neural network computers. 25 million years is a LOT of data collection.

\"No amount of artificial intelligence can detect information that isn\'t there.\" Natural intelligence can\'t either/

> Then you have no idea whatsoever what kind of sensing these creatures posses.

Actually, I do have pretty clear idea. People have been looking at animal sensory systems for quite a while now, and one that can get a detailed look at rock movement ten mile underground hasn\'t been listed yet.

> There have been studies which determined increased blood pressure and heart rates in alarmed animals. I wouldn\'t put it past them to have the ability to see future time.

Anybody sane would disregard that possibility. You just labelled yourself as insane.,

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.

<snip>

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 6:08:28 PM UTC-8, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake.

I\'m guessing scorpions can do it. They are living seismometers, do night hunting for burrowing insects by
feeling with their legs the ground movement. Spiders sensing the quiver of a web get BIG signals by comparison.

Animal sensoria are various and diverse; a dog might hear or smell the precursors to a volcanic event,
for instance, as ( a few days in advance) seismometers detect magma movement precursors.

As for knowing WHAT they\'re sensing, or doing something appropriate for survival... less likely.
 
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife. And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.

And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

> And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.


And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.
A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.

The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.

Really?

And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.

They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection.

> The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.

And pigs might fly.

--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
 
On Wednesday, 22 February 2023 at 13:56:17 UTC+1, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 11:29:27 PM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 9:29:55 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Wednesday, February 22, 2023 at 5:47:41 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote:
On Monday, February 20, 2023 at 11:31:44 PM UTC-5, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
On Tuesday, February 21, 2023 at 1:08:28 PM UTC+11, a a wrote:
\"Can animals predict an earthquake?

The earliest reference we have to unusual animal behavior prior to a significant earthquake is from Greece in 373 BC. Rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes reportedly left their homes and headed for safety several days before a destructive earthquake. Anecdotal evidence abounds of animals, fish, birds, reptiles, and insects exhibiting strange behavior anywhere from weeks to seconds before an earthquake. However, consistent and reliable behavior prior to seismic events, and a mechanism explaining how it could work, still eludes us. Most, but not all, scientists pursuing this mystery are in China or Japan.
snip

The trouble with anecdotal evidence is that if rats, weasels, snakes, and centipedes had got spooked by clusters small earthquakes that failed to precede a big one, nobody would have taken any note of it.

As such, there isn\'t any mystery there. If you have superstitious clowns in charge of research funding. scientists can end up finding themselves studying this kind of nonsense.

It\'s not superstition, it\'s called observation. There are many natural events that can be presaged by observing wildlife.
And wildlife gets upset by all kinds of events. The difficultly is working out what they are getting upset about, and whether it matters.

It is well known that major earthquakes are often preceded by cluster of small earth quakes which upset wild-life. The problems is that there are a lot more clusters of small earth quakes than there are major earthquakes.

It\'s a bit more than that because with the really big catastrophes, the birds and other animals have long since completely evacuated the area.
Really?
And it may not be all sensory. Animals communicate and can relay an alarm over hundreds of miles, quite rapidly too. Ornithologists have measured bird calls, the kind the birds recognize as something that should be relayed, traveling at over 100 MPH. If a flock sees the ground splitting and opening up, it will put out an alarm that gets relayed. There are similar mechanisms at work among mammals, reptiles, and fish. Most mammals in the wild can understand alarm bird calls.

A flock will put out alarm calls for a whole variety of events, The problem is finding one that unambiguously signals something that humans would like to be warned about.

The humans are just catching up by using AI machine learning at the local level to collect massive amounts of data and extract patterns indicative of an imminent massive event. The development of such a system was recently reported by Northwestern University research. I contend that 25 millions years of experiential DNA programming of wildlife DNA has achieved the same effect in a better way. They *know* the catastrophe is coming, and soon.
They don\'t. The movement of rock - deep underground - which produce major earthquakes, aren\'t signalled by little shocks that you can detect on the surface.

No amount of artificial intellegence can detect information that isn\'t there. Dig the deep bore holes and fire the seismic charges that let you map the rock strata strata and you may get somewhere. So far we\'ve only mapped one continental plate - the Arab peninsula. It does happen to be the smallest one, and there\'s a lot of oil there which is what paid for the exercise. I know the Dutch guy that ran the project via a very indirect connection.
The science is not quite there yet, but reports are they are on the cusp of establishing with certainty that what we have been heretofore describing as instinct is previous learning stored in their DNA.


The Arab peninsula\'s tectonic plate gets separated from the land of Turkey,
what can be live watched below

https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/?extent=-4.74068,-353.58398&extent=56.07204,-269.20898&range=week&magnitude=all&listOnlyShown=true
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top