Posted by EQF on May 04, 2003 at 09:42:41:
Chris, I also do not read all of the notes posted here. One reasons is that something in their format code causes my computer to want to crash. And it has to go through a 10 minute disk check routine etc. before it is running again. I am planning on getting a new one. But that is not a high priority project at the moment. Here is what appears to be happening in terms which are so overly simplified that they are not especially accurate. But they generally explain what is taking place. Strain builds over time in fault zones. If you have one which points north and south then the moon gravity may trigger an earthquake in it when it is in a position in the sky where it is to the east or west of the fault zone. If the fault zone points east and west then the earthquake may be triggered when the moon is to the north or south of the fault zone. That gravity related temporary addition of strain to a fault zone operates in cycles which have different time lengths. And my latest Web site files show how those time cycles operate. In my opinion this is not speculation. My own data indicate that this is the case. And there are other groups now which are apparently publishing papers on this. But I have not heard of any being published here in the U.S. Perhaps the main reason this science is not already well developed is because people have been looking at the wrong types of data all these years. With my Web site files I am trying to explain what types of data they should be studying. And a report which I am preparing should make this clear to scientists around the world if and when I circulate it. I need to get one more file prepared and stored at my Web site before I can do that.
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