Good Day, How is everything with you, I picked interest on you after going through your short profile and deemed it necessary to write you immediately. I have something very vital to disclose to you, but I found it difficult to express myself here, since it's a public site.Could you please get back to me on:( officialaishacbd@gmail.com ) for the full details. Have a nice day Thanks God bless
A notable 5.7M earthquake has struck the Mediterranean Sea, along the shores of Algeria, in North Africa.
This area is not normally prone for large earthquake movement.
The shallow depth of the event most likely means people in the region felt the movement rather sharply. Luckily, the region is mostly desert, and along the sea.
M5.6 – 11km NNW of Bordj el Kiffan, Algeria 2014-08-01 04:11:16 UTC
Event Time
2014-08-01 04:11:16 UTC
2014-08-01 05:11:16 UTC+01:00 at epicenter
2014-07-31 23:11:16 UTC-05:00 system time
Location
36.851°N 3.161°E depth=10.0km (6.2mi)
Nearby Cities
11km (7mi) NNW of Bordj el Kiffan, Algeria
12km (7mi) WNW of Ain Taya, Algeria
13km (8mi) N of Bab Ezzouar, Algeria
15km (9mi) NE of Algiers, Algeria
15km (9mi) NNW of Dar el Beida, Algeria
Ironically, the ONLYVLF station for a thousand miles in either direction is at this spot… 9 miles SW of the earthquake epicenter.
Odd.
Whats even MORE odd, is the fact that the only VLF stations in operation are Greece and Algeria.
Algeria is such a specific location, to have both an Earthquake AND to have it be the only spot operating VLF for a thousand miles…. should not be overlooked as “coincidence”.
Here is a list of the Stanford VLF stations (and their data) — Most are not functional. Usually there are only a few in operation at any given time.
Comments
Good Day,
How is everything with you, I picked interest on you after going through your short profile and deemed it necessary to write you immediately. I have something very vital to disclose to you, but I found it difficult to express myself here, since it's a public site.Could you please get back to me on:( officialaishacbd@gmail.com ) for the full details.
Have a nice day
Thanks God bless
Welcome Pete! I hope you have a great time here!
8/01/2014 — EUROPE 5.7M EARTHQUAKE @ VLF TRANSMISSION STATION– MEDITERRANEAN / ALGERIA
A notable 5.7M earthquake has struck the Mediterranean Sea, along the shores of Algeria, in North Africa.
This area is not normally prone for large earthquake movement.
The shallow depth of the event most likely means people in the region felt the movement rather sharply. Luckily, the region is mostly desert, and along the sea.
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/usb000rz1p#summary
M5.6 – 11km NNW of Bordj el Kiffan, Algeria 2014-08-01 04:11:16 UTC
Event Time
Location
36.851°N 3.161°E depth=10.0km (6.2mi)
Nearby Cities
Ironically, the ONLY VLF station for a thousand miles in either direction is at this spot… 9 miles SW of the earthquake epicenter.
Odd.
Whats even MORE odd, is the fact that the only VLF stations in operation are Greece and Algeria.
Algeria is such a specific location, to have both an Earthquake AND to have it be the only spot operating VLF for a thousand miles…. should not be overlooked as “coincidence”.
Here is a list of the Stanford VLF stations (and their data) — Most are not functional. Usually there are only a few in operation at any given time.
http://vlf-alexandria.stanford.edu/live_spec_secure/
Algeria’s VLF information says the page cannot be displayed :
http://vlf-alexandria.stanford.edu/live_spec_secure/algeria/
Here is the nearest functioning VLF antenna broadcasting data: Crete , Greece:
http://vlf-alexandria.stanford.edu/live_spec_secure/crete/
Overall, I would say its very ironic that the only functioning VLF stations (Greece and Algeria) both reside near the earthquake epicenter.
Especially since Algeria is NOT showing on the chart, but showing as being active today!
I'm glad to be here!