A quick one from the Sat's 11 / 7 / 2016
#1
Some interesting data was displayed on the ACE site today, I believe it relates to a couple of Southern hemisphere anomolies. My own systems are only good to about 30 degrees South during summer, and shows very little compared to the satellite data. I have worked the sat's before and don't know how I faired as a responce was not forthcoming, so again this is my interpretation regarding the signals in the following images, relating to this prediction.

This prediction is for a magnitude 5 - 6.5 at two locations ...

First ... located below South Africe and East of Bouvet Island at bearing 7' E long by 54' S lat +/- 3'

Second ... Kermadec Islands region at bearing 178' 30' W long by 32' S lat +/- 5'

This prediction will run for 7 days until 00:00 18th July.

   

The structure in this image represents a double terminator transit from one anomoly to another. The structure starts at 15:18 ut, this is the point the evening civil twilight zone makes first contact with an anomoly near Bouvet Island. Each peak in the trace represents a border pass between zones, there seems little conflict between the different traces which may indicate a mirror effect of just one anomoly. The structure finishes at 19:00 ut, suggesting possible last contact of the morning civil twilight border with an anomoly in the Kermadec region. If this assumption is correct, and the last portion of the structure being more prominent, it could indicate a stronger response.

   

I mentioned in my post yesterday (10th) of a coinsidental solar position during a 5.6 quake in Vanuatu .. Firstly, appologies if my wording seemed a bit forward, I had one for the road with a friend last night, and should have known to stay off the keyboard ... I think he was called Jack D..... ?   However, the moon's position during said event was 7 degrees East longitude.  When the large blue spike in this image occurred at 16:44 ut, the left limb of the moon (relative to map) was on 7 degrees East longitude, it had just started entering the evening civil twilight region. The small green spike at 16:56 ut occurred when the nautical / astronomical twilight border made contact with the same anomoly off Bouvet Island.

This may be seen as an interesting hypothesis, or total baloney ... the next 7 days should decide which !!

Thank you

Duffy

(21:36 ut)




Reply
#2
(07-11-2016, 09:36 PM)Duffy Wrote: Some interesting data was displayed on the ACE site today, I believe it relates to a couple of Southern hemisphere anomolies. My own systems are only good to about 30 degrees South during summer, and shows very little compared to the satellite data. I have worked the sat's before and don't know how I faired as a responce was not forthcoming, so again this is my interpretation regarding the  signals in the following images, relating to this prediction.

This prediction is for a magnitude 5 - 6.5 at two locations ...

First ... located below South Africe and East of Bouvet Island at bearing 7' E long by 54' S lat +/- 3'

Second ... Kermadec Islands region at bearing 178' 30' W long by 32' S lat +/- 5'

This prediction will run for 7 days until 00:00 18th July.



The structure in this image represents a double terminator transit from one anomoly to another. The structure starts at 15:18 ut, this is the point the evening civil twilight zone makes first contact with an anomoly near Bouvet Island. Each peak in the trace represents a border pass between zones, there seems little conflict between the different traces which may indicate a mirror effect of just one anomoly. The structure finishes at 19:00 ut, suggesting possible last contact of the morning civil twilight border with an anomoly in the Kermadec region. If this assumption is correct, and the last portion of the structure being more prominent, it could indicate a stronger response.



I mentioned in my post yesterday (10th) of a coinsidental solar position during a 5.6 quake in Vanuatu .. Firstly, appologies if my wording seemed a bit forward, I had one for the road with a friend last night, and should have known to stay off the keyboard ... I think he was called Jack D..... ?   However, the moon's position during said event was 7 degrees East longitude.  When the large blue spike in this image occurred at 16:44 ut, the left limb of the moon (relative to map) was on 7 degrees East longitude, it had just started entering the evening civil twilight region. The small green spike at 16:56 ut occurred when the nautical / astronomical twilight border made contact with the same anomoly off Bouvet Island.

This may be seen as an interesting hypothesis, or total baloney ... the next 7 days should decide which !!

Thank you

Duffy

(21:36 ut)

I was going to include more images here, but my broadband is playing up, luckily my Acer is picking up a weak signal so a quick update follows

Space data has changed, anomaly at 178' 30' has gone (probably 4.7 Tonga at 01:52 ut), new anomaly has appeared at 168' E long by 31' S lat off the coast of North island, NZ.  Morphology has changed in my own data at 21:52 ut, looks exactly like the pattern I recorded before Fiji quakes in May. Could be a countdown so I'll try an ETA of 05:40 ut +/- 30 minutes, possible locations are 7' E Bouvet Island region or Celebes Sea at 120' 30' E.

Don't like knocking new posts off the top of the list, so checkout "Parkfield"

Duffy

(23:25)




Reply
#3
(07-12-2016, 11:25 PM)Duffy Wrote:
(07-11-2016, 09:36 PM)Duffy Wrote: Some interesting data was displayed on the ACE site today, I believe it relates to a couple of Southern hemisphere anomolies. My own systems are only good to about 30 degrees South during summer, and shows very little compared to the satellite data. I have worked the sat's before and don't know how I faired as a responce was not forthcoming, so again this is my interpretation regarding the  signals in the following images, relating to this prediction.

This prediction is for a magnitude 5 - 6.5 at two locations ...

First ... located below South Africe and East of Bouvet Island at bearing 7' E long by 54' S lat +/- 3'

Second ... Kermadec Islands region at bearing 178' 30' W long by 32' S lat +/- 5'

This prediction will run for 7 days until 00:00 18th July.



The structure in this image represents a double terminator transit from one anomoly to another. The structure starts at 15:18 ut, this is the point the evening civil twilight zone makes first contact with an anomoly near Bouvet Island. Each peak in the trace represents a border pass between zones, there seems little conflict between the different traces which may indicate a mirror effect of just one anomoly. The structure finishes at 19:00 ut, suggesting possible last contact of the morning civil twilight border with an anomoly in the Kermadec region. If this assumption is correct, and the last portion of the structure being more prominent, it could indicate a stronger response.



I mentioned in my post yesterday (10th) of a coinsidental solar position during a 5.6 quake in Vanuatu .. Firstly, appologies if my wording seemed a bit forward, I had one for the road with a friend last night, and should have known to stay off the keyboard ... I think he was called Jack D..... ?   However, the moon's position during said event was 7 degrees East longitude.  When the large blue spike in this image occurred at 16:44 ut, the left limb of the moon (relative to map) was on 7 degrees East longitude, it had just started entering the evening civil twilight region. The small green spike at 16:56 ut occurred when the nautical / astronomical twilight border made contact with the same anomoly off Bouvet Island.

This may be seen as an interesting hypothesis, or total baloney ... the next 7 days should decide which !!

Thank you

Duffy

(21:36 ut)

I was going to include more images here, but my broadband is playing up, luckily my Acer is picking up a weak signal so a quick update follows

Space data has changed, anomaly at 178' 30' has gone (probably 4.7 Tonga at 01:52 ut), new anomaly has appeared at 168' E long by 31' S lat off the coast of North island, NZ.  Morphology has changed in my own data at 21:52 ut, looks exactly like the pattern I recorded before Fiji quakes in May. Could be a countdown so I'll try an ETA of 05:40 ut +/- 30 minutes, possible locations are 7' E Bouvet Island region or Celebes Sea at 120' 30' E.

Don't like knocking new posts off the top of the list, so checkout "Parkfield"

Duffy

(23:25)

Quake in the Kermadecs today. 

I can't comment much for the next few weeks. My son is moving to Kansas and I'm selling that house (hopefully) so fixups will take up my time.

Roger




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#4
(07-13-2016, 08:14 PM)Roger Hunter Wrote:
(07-12-2016, 11:25 PM)Duffy Wrote:
(07-11-2016, 09:36 PM)Duffy Wrote: Some interesting data was displayed on the ACE site today, I believe it relates to a couple of Southern hemisphere anomolies. My own systems are only good to about 30 degrees South during summer, and shows very little compared to the satellite data. I have worked the sat's before and don't know how I faired as a responce was not forthcoming, so again this is my interpretation regarding the  signals in the following images, relating to this prediction.

This prediction is for a magnitude 5 - 6.5 at two locations ...

First ... located below South Africe and East of Bouvet Island at bearing 7' E long by 54' S lat +/- 3'

Second ... Kermadec Islands region at bearing 178' 30' W long by 32' S lat +/- 5'

This prediction will run for 7 days until 00:00 18th July.



The structure in this image represents a double terminator transit from one anomoly to another. The structure starts at 15:18 ut, this is the point the evening civil twilight zone makes first contact with an anomoly near Bouvet Island. Each peak in the trace represents a border pass between zones, there seems little conflict between the different traces which may indicate a mirror effect of just one anomoly. The structure finishes at 19:00 ut, suggesting possible last contact of the morning civil twilight border with an anomoly in the Kermadec region. If this assumption is correct, and the last portion of the structure being more prominent, it could indicate a stronger response.



I mentioned in my post yesterday (10th) of a coinsidental solar position during a 5.6 quake in Vanuatu .. Firstly, appologies if my wording seemed a bit forward, I had one for the road with a friend last night, and should have known to stay off the keyboard ... I think he was called Jack D..... ?   However, the moon's position during said event was 7 degrees East longitude.  When the large blue spike in this image occurred at 16:44 ut, the left limb of the moon (relative to map) was on 7 degrees East longitude, it had just started entering the evening civil twilight region. The small green spike at 16:56 ut occurred when the nautical / astronomical twilight border made contact with the same anomoly off Bouvet Island.

This may be seen as an interesting hypothesis, or total baloney ... the next 7 days should decide which !!

Thank you

Duffy

(21:36 ut)

I was going to include more images here, but my broadband is playing up, luckily my Acer is picking up a weak signal so a quick update follows

Space data has changed, anomaly at 178' 30' has gone (probably 4.7 Tonga at 01:52 ut), new anomaly has appeared at 168' E long by 31' S lat off the coast of North island, NZ.  Morphology has changed in my own data at 21:52 ut, looks exactly like the pattern I recorded before Fiji quakes in May. Could be a countdown so I'll try an ETA of 05:40 ut +/- 30 minutes, possible locations are 7' E Bouvet Island region or Celebes Sea at 120' 30' E.

Don't like knocking new posts off the top of the list, so checkout "Parkfield"

Duffy

(23:25)

Quake in the Kermadecs today. 

I can't comment much for the next few weeks. My son is moving to Kansas and I'm selling that house (hopefully) so fixups will take up my time.

Roger

Oh! Okay Roger, I can assume this isn't total baloney then ?

Duffy




Reply
#5
(07-13-2016, 11:14 PM)Duffy Wrote:
(07-13-2016, 08:14 PM)Roger Hunter Wrote:
(07-12-2016, 11:25 PM)Duffy Wrote:
(07-11-2016, 09:36 PM)Duffy Wrote: Some interesting data was displayed on the ACE site today, I believe it relates to a couple of Southern hemisphere anomolies. My own systems are only good to about 30 degrees South during summer, and shows very little compared to the satellite data. I have worked the sat's before and don't know how I faired as a responce was not forthcoming, so again this is my interpretation regarding the  signals in the following images, relating to this prediction.

This prediction is for a magnitude 5 - 6.5 at two locations ...

First ... located below South Africe and East of Bouvet Island at bearing 7' E long by 54' S lat +/- 3'

Second ... Kermadec Islands region at bearing 178' 30' W long by 32' S lat +/- 5'

This prediction will run for 7 days until 00:00 18th July.



The structure in this image represents a double terminator transit from one anomoly to another. The structure starts at 15:18 ut, this is the point the evening civil twilight zone makes first contact with an anomoly near Bouvet Island. Each peak in the trace represents a border pass between zones, there seems little conflict between the different traces which may indicate a mirror effect of just one anomoly. The structure finishes at 19:00 ut, suggesting possible last contact of the morning civil twilight border with an anomoly in the Kermadec region. If this assumption is correct, and the last portion of the structure being more prominent, it could indicate a stronger response.



I mentioned in my post yesterday (10th) of a coinsidental solar position during a 5.6 quake in Vanuatu .. Firstly, appologies if my wording seemed a bit forward, I had one for the road with a friend last night, and should have known to stay off the keyboard ... I think he was called Jack D..... ?   However, the moon's position during said event was 7 degrees East longitude.  When the large blue spike in this image occurred at 16:44 ut, the left limb of the moon (relative to map) was on 7 degrees East longitude, it had just started entering the evening civil twilight region. The small green spike at 16:56 ut occurred when the nautical / astronomical twilight border made contact with the same anomoly off Bouvet Island.

This may be seen as an interesting hypothesis, or total baloney ... the next 7 days should decide which !!

Thank you

Duffy

(21:36 ut)

I was going to include more images here, but my broadband is playing up, luckily my Acer is picking up a weak signal so a quick update follows

Space data has changed, anomaly at 178' 30' has gone (probably 4.7 Tonga at 01:52 ut), new anomaly has appeared at 168' E long by 31' S lat off the coast of North island, NZ.  Morphology has changed in my own data at 21:52 ut, looks exactly like the pattern I recorded before Fiji quakes in May. Could be a countdown so I'll try an ETA of 05:40 ut +/- 30 minutes, possible locations are 7' E Bouvet Island region or Celebes Sea at 120' 30' E.

Don't like knocking new posts off the top of the list, so checkout "Parkfield"

Duffy

(23:25)

Quake in the Kermadecs today. 

I can't comment much for the next few weeks. My son is moving to Kansas and I'm selling that house (hopefully) so fixups will take up my time.

Roger

Oh! Okay Roger, I can assume this isn't total baloney then ?

Duffy

Duffy;

Too early to tell. Small samples can be misleading. 

Roger




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