
Sandie Seward
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Weird colours spotted in the sky before the Earthquake.http://www.glumbert.com/media/weirdcolors
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JoJo
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Sorry Sandie tried to open the link but nothing happened
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Sandie Seward
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JoJo, try to paste the link in your browser if it doesn't work from here.
It is a three and half minute video of one of the strangest looking cloud formations I have ever seen.
Well worth following up, as it was shot just half an hour before the terrible earthquake that devastated a huge area of China, and left some towns completely destroyed.
The link works perfectly for me. If anyone else has problems viewing it, please let me know. I have checked and double-checked the link, and it's working well for me using my Flock Browser. I have to admit I haven't tried it using Internet Explorer. That might make a difference.
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JoJo
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Worked for me this time,my friend from Canada sent me something similar last year,she called it a fire formation,and it only happens when certain elements form together,I have the information somewhere I will try and find it this week.
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Sandie Seward
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I keep watching this clip, JoJo. I find it very moving somehow. I wonder if the people talking survived the quake?
I wish I could understand the conversation. If anyone who can understand the language could please post a translation for us, (e.mail me), I would be extremely grateful.
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JoJo
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This is a fire rainbow this picture was captured on the Idaho- Washington border,the event lasted about one hour.
Clouds have to be cirrus,at least 20.000 feet in the air with just the right amont of ice crystals and the sun has to hit the clouds at precisley 58 degrees,
That is the information that came with the E-mail.
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Sandie Seward
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I was watching a Channel Five documentary on UFO's earlier this evening, and, I think those lights in the video are what is known as "Earthlights", apparently before an earthquake, the Earth releases gases that rise to the atmosphere and become reflected in sunlight (or moonlight).
" It was that eccentric American collector of anomalous material, Charles Fort, who compiled the first catalogue of reports of mysterious lights in the sky, long before anyone had thought to equate such manifestations with alien spacecraft. In fact, for all his many bizarre ideas, Fort had literally a down-to-earth view of what the luminous phenomena might be and noted a possible geographical connection between them and regions prone to earthquakes and tremors. The name "earth lights" was coined much more recently by British researcher Paul Devereux, author of the only two full books on the subject."
Whatever, It's still a weird and wonderful event.
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