March 24, 2011 (LPAC) - The web site of the English investigative journalist Daniel Estulin placed since 17 March, LPAC-TV video of "The Ring of Fire" with an introductory commentary which argues against a variant of the hoaxes that circulate among the internationally popular media: that the U.S. military program research HARP ionosphere (English initials Research Program High Frequency Active Auroral) "caused" the earthquake in Japan:
"The scientific research HAARP project, sponsored by the military, is one thing, but then there are a lot of nonsense, reasoning more than superficial. Like all these cases, they are attempts, motivated by fear, to evade the most significant scientific issues, making use of populist nonsense that are perfectly compatible with the ideology of people addicted to sensory perception.
"The culprit of events Japan is not nuclear energy, or HAARP, but the sun. So we better get serious respect to understanding the true nature of the physical universe, and that requires abandoning the domain of Aristotelian sense-certainty, in favor of universal processes dynamic science and space-time Riemann and Einstein. See the following video of Lyndon LaRouche, please. "
abnormal fish behavior highlights the danger of earthquake in U.S. Pacific coast
March 24, 2011 - As documented a recent video on LPAC the Ring of Fire, shortly before the onset of large earthquakes abnormal behavior occurs in animals such as fish. U.S. geologist Jim Berkland referred to several recent reports of unusual behavior of fish, an aspect of the basis for its forecast of a high possibility of major earthquakes between 19 March and 27 March in the U.S. Pacific coast. Specific incidents were:
* On Tuesday March 8, more than a million were killed sardines in Redondo Beach Marina, south of Los Angeles, California. The sardines are thrown at King Harbor in amounts that were spent all the oxygen in the water and died en masse. More 175 tons of sardines were killed in the port. Schools of fish alive and less flow over dead fish also appeared in King Harbor on Friday 18 March.
* On Wednesday 9 March, spotted a group of about 15 sperm whales on the surface of the ocean between Long Beach and Catalina Island as a marine biologist. "They are an endangered species, and it is surprising the fact that we have seen relatively close to an urban area," said David Bader, a marine biologist from the Aquarium of the Pacific. "It's like watching a herd of elephants, right on the coast of Long Beach." Whales of the pack on Wednesday were like 12 meters in length, and probably immature females and males, "said Bader. "I usually only come to the surface for a minute and then immersed under water for up to one hour, so we can usually only take a look," said Bader. "These whales went there just wasting time, to put it in some way." "While we know that there is a sperm whale off the coast of California, is very rare sighting of this species and to see a lot together is something that virtually never seen in these waters," said Bader.
Sperm whales are occasionally sighted in southern California, but usually singly or in small groups. Large flocks as that seen on Wednesday are "extremely rare" said Alisa Schulman-Janiger, a researcher at the American Cetacean Society. Schulman-Janiger, who heads the Census and Behavior Project of the Gray Whale in the Palos Verdes Peninsula, said that for at least 30 years a group of volunteers at the top of the promontory of the South Bay spotted a large herd.
* A herd of sperm whales was spotted off the coast of San Diego in the same period of time.
* On Tuesday 14 March, a humpback whale was spotted by passengers aboard the Condor Express in front of Santa Barbara, the first sighting of the humpback whale, which makes the boat this season. Condor Express crew spotted six other humpback whales on Wednesday 15 March. Humpback whales that migrate from the south into the waters of Southern California, normally not begin to see until late April or early May.
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