Planet X: FLASHES Increase
Accompanying booms caused by heaving seas in
response to earth movements will increasingly be flashes
of light, leading the startled public to perceive that an
explosion might have happened. As the booms happen
over water where could the spark for an explosion come
from? These are indeed related to the booms, and are
indeed explosions, and emerge from the same source.
As we have stated in explanation to the Tunguska
explosion, great pools of methane gas lie trapped under
the surface in certain areas of the world, due to rotting
debris trapped under layers of volcanic ash or sediment.
Just as the booms indicate adjustments in the sea bed
causing heaving water to clap, just so the flashes
indicate adjustments in land masses allowing the methane
gas to escape and on occasion spark into an explosion.
ZetaTalk, Flashes
(http://www.zetatalk.com/science/s82.htm)
Science Frontiers #99
May-June1995, by William R. Corliss
One of the strongest earthquake illuminations came
during the Chinese earthquake of 1976, when it was
reported that the lights at the centre of the earthquake
were bright enough to turn night into day. As far as
320 kilometres from the epicenter of the quake people
woke up thinking their room lights had been turned on.
Strange Blaze Near England, Arkansas, Puzzles Police
Arkansas Democrat Gazette, March 11, 2000
A mysterious fire scorched 40 acres early Friday
morning before emergency workers controlled it, central
Arkansas officials said. The Pulaski County Emergency
Management Department responded to the fire just before
midnight a few miles south of England when a call
alerted officials to a possible plane crash, Emergency
Management Director Kathy Botsford said. No evidence
of a plane crash was found. The fire burned parts of
Pulaski, Lonoke and Jefferson counties. Most of the
damage was sustained on land in Jefferson County,
which is in charge of the investigation, according to
Lt. Eugene Butler of that county's sheriff's office. Only
one house sits near the l50-foot-wide, mile-long area
that burned, but no damage was reported to that building.
A pipeline explosion was also suggested as a cause of
the fire, but Botsford said that the contents of the pipes
running rough the area are nonflammable and the
company that owns the pipes said no leaks had been
detected.