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Indian Superscientist Who Predicts Earthquake |
This has been brought to my attention - It is rather interesting - and there's even an instrument that can measure the waves... Subject: Indian Superscientist Who Predicts Earthquake Date: 2001-02-02 09:41:29 PST Sounds fantastic. Almost like the guy who makes gasoline from plants (which was a true story as the Indian Petroleum minister Mr. Ram Naik confirmed to us in Houston just last month) The Rediff Special/ George Iype Can earthquakes be predicted? Scientists and seismologists the world over say it is impossible. Eighty-year-old P N Nair, though, believes he has Though science may dismiss him, thousands of Kutch residents will now find it difficult to forget him. Earlier, when he predicted a devastating Which is why, today, Nair is a frustrated man. Though he is distraught that most of his friends and neighbours in Gandhidham have perished, he is K N Ramachandran, in whose house Nair made the prediction, is yet to recover from the shock of finding out his guest was right. "On the evening of January 24, Nair said he could sense thunderous sound from within the earth. He then explained to me and others in the village that an earthquake would soon hit Gujarat. When that disaster actually happened on Republic Day, we were awestruck." Ramachandran is a retired deputy director of education in Kerala. Nair denies any premonition about impending earthquakes. He adds that -- unlike what people are beginning to attribute to him -- he does not have any divine powers. "It is all scientific," he insists. "I can predict earthquakes scientifically. But I am sad that the authorities and the so-called seismological experts are unwilling to listen to me." When and how did earthquakes begin to fascinate him so much that he made it the focus of his life? Nair, who then worked for the Military Engineering He began at night, standing barefoot on the land outside his house. And he would feel a sound, which he compares to that of a gunshot. Occasionally, he would even feel an electric shock go through his body. He read extensively on sound waves and the earth's movements. He researched the entire Kutch area. And then, in 1974, he announced what he called the Nair Effect Magnetic Field Theory. "There is a momentary lightening and thunder effect below the earth's crust when its plates collide. This produces a magnetic "The earth's crust is formed of plates. When these plates collide, the electrons move and a process of ionization takes place, aided by the high Nair says the traditional tectonic theory accepted by seismologists has many holes. "It does not explain the gap between the accumulation of pressure under the ground and the actual earthquake. Seismologists do not know what Nair claims that, seven days before an earthquake hits a region, one can scientifically spot the following indicators: A humming effect follows most sounds; swaying shock-waves; the rumbling sound of vehicles or falling objects; the audibility of distant sounds; echoes in the horizon; khar-khar sounds on the roads and flashes of light that move from right to left on But how do these indicators help Nair decide the location of an earthquake? "The direction of these sounds can be scaled, depending upon their strength and force. Let me try to explain with a rough example. If you felt that these sounds were coming from, say one kilometre away, it is certain the earthquake would hit some 1,500 kilometers away." How does he measure these sounds? Nair has created an harmonium-like instrument, powered by four batteries, that can feel the signals of an impending earthquake. So how many earthquakes has he predicted? "Many," says Nair, opening a diary in which he has listed the times and the places of the earthquakes he has In the seventies, Nair wrote to then prime minister Indira Gandhi about his ability to predict earthquakes. She forwarded his request to the Indian Meteorological Department and other earthquake research centres. "But I did not get any response from them. Everyone thinks I am a prankster. If the government spends half the money it wastes on the countless number of scientists and seismologists who do no work across the country, I can develop a world-class research centre for earthquakes in India." But neither Nair, though, has the support of the people of Kerala. In 1993, during one of his visits to the state, Nair said Kerala was earthquake-prone. On Since then, the Malayalam vernacular press has dubbed him Earthquake chettan (brother). In the last two months, Nair has held three press conferences. He has addressed a number of public meetings where he answers people's queries Follow Ups: ● Re: Indian Superscientist Who Predicts Earthquake - EQF 07:21:34 - 10/23/2003 (19840) (1) ● Re: Indian Superscientist Who Predicts Earthquake - Canie 07:47:12 - 10/23/2003 (19841) (0) ● Re: Indian Superscientist Who Predicts Earthquake - Don in Hollister 22:32:36 - 10/22/2003 (19838) (0) |
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