It does sound like its coming from the sky and there is a slight vibration in everything and it always seems to be coming from every direction.
Strange sounds heard again and this time over Queens, New York on August 29, 2014.
According to Linda Moulton Howe these sounds are generated inside the earth. In our article 'Increased Earthquakes, Strange Sounds and Sinkholes', Linda explains that the inner core and the outer core of our planet has changed from a sphere spinning to something that is now spinning in any direction, causing an infrasound.
Infrasound can be generated by lava in a liquid state, moving up through the mantle of the earth, out of crust and into a volcano. Sometimes the infrasound can up to the Ionosphere and bounced back.
Furthermore, according to NewScientist, Earth's tectonic plates have doubled their speed. Plate tectonics is driven by the formation and destruction of oceanic crust. This crust forms where plates move apart, allowing hot, light magma to rise from the mantle.
And in an unexpected discovery, hundreds of gas plumes bubbling up from the seafloor of the Atlantic Ocean were spotted during a sweeping survey of the U.S. Atlantic Coast. Even though ocean explorers have yet to test the gas, the bubbles are almost certainly methane.
Is a Supervolcano lying dormant in the Atlantic?
Strange sounds heard again and this time over Queens, New York on August 29, 2014.
According to Linda Moulton Howe these sounds are generated inside the earth. In our article 'Increased Earthquakes, Strange Sounds and Sinkholes', Linda explains that the inner core and the outer core of our planet has changed from a sphere spinning to something that is now spinning in any direction, causing an infrasound.
Infrasound can be generated by lava in a liquid state, moving up through the mantle of the earth, out of crust and into a volcano. Sometimes the infrasound can up to the Ionosphere and bounced back.
Furthermore, according to NewScientist, Earth's tectonic plates have doubled their speed. Plate tectonics is driven by the formation and destruction of oceanic crust. This crust forms where plates move apart, allowing hot, light magma to rise from the mantle.
And in an unexpected discovery, hundreds of gas plumes bubbling up from the seafloor of the Atlantic Ocean were spotted during a sweeping survey of the U.S. Atlantic Coast. Even though ocean explorers have yet to test the gas, the bubbles are almost certainly methane.
Is a Supervolcano lying dormant in the Atlantic?