DEAR ALL
BEFORE 12 HOURS FROM NOW, PAPUA NEW GUINEA RECEIVED A SUPER 6.2 M EARTHQUAKE.
WHAT IS IMPORTANT IS,THERE IS A PATTERN IN THIS TWO EARTHQUAKE,
IF WE COMPARE THE LAST NEW ZELAND EARTHQUAKE,
WHICH WAS 7+
THE LONGITUDE IS SHIFTING 1 REGION AS ON THE GLOBE
LIKE AFTER NEW ZEALAND'S EARTHQUAKE THE NEXT CAME IN VENEZUELA WHICH WAS 4.5+
AS WE SEE nz is bn 150-180 EAST LONGITUDE
PAPAU NEW GUINEA IS 120-150 EAST...
IF WE SEE THE LONGITUDES
NZ IS 30 TO 60 SOUTH AND PAPAU NEW GUNEA IS 0-30S
THIS MEANS THE LATITUDE IS MOVING 30 DEGREE NORTH AND LONGITUDE IS SHIFTING TOWARDS THE PRIME MERIDIAN BY 30 DEGREE.
THIS SQUARE BLOCKS ARE IMAGINARY ON ANY MAP....
IF THERE IS A PATTERN IN THIS EARTHQUAKE,THEN CAN THE NEXT SUPER EARTHQUAKE BE
90-120E AND 0-30N
THAT BLOCK INCLUDES-
VIETNAM,SOUTHERN CHINA,THAILAND AND ADJOINING AREAS
AKSHAY;S GYAAN SEISMOLOGY TEAM HAS BEEN CALLED IN FOR AN URGENT MEETING
I SHALL UPDATE LATER
HERE IS THE NEWS ARTICLE ON PAPAU NEW GUNEA;S EARTHQUAKE--
A strong earthquake with a magnitude of 6.2 struck off Papua New Guinea's island of Bougainville on Saturday but there were no
immediate reports of any damage, seismologists said.
The tremor, which struck at 11:42 am local time (0142 GMT), was about 80 kilometres (50 miles) west of Arawa city at a depth of 65 kilometres, according the US Geological Survey.
"At this stage we have not received any reports of any damage," a spokesman for PNG's national earthquakes centre said.
"We have not had any report of such activity as a tsunami, but normally (with) earthquakes of about 6.2 we rarely anticipate tsunamis along our coastline," he added.
Papua New Guinea sits on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire", where continental plates meet. The region is frequently hit by earthquakes.
The tremor, which struck at 11:42 am local time (0142 GMT), was about 80 kilometres (50 miles) west of Arawa city at a depth of 65 kilometres, according the US Geological Survey.
"At this stage we have not received any reports of any damage," a spokesman for PNG's national earthquakes centre said.
"We have not had any report of such activity as a tsunami, but normally (with) earthquakes of about 6.2 we rarely anticipate tsunamis along our coastline," he added.
Papua New Guinea sits on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire", where continental plates meet. The region is frequently hit by earthquakes.
AKSHAY-
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