Infrasound Pulsation in Sydney, Australia
Sydney's Houses Shaking Not Earthquake
The Sunday Times
August 7, 2007
It might have felt like an earthquake to Sydney coastal residents but it wasn't, scientists say.
Dozens of Sydney coastal residents reported their houses shaking this afternoon but Geoscience Australia said it was not an earthquake.
Residents reported windows shaking about 3:45pm (AEST) in the eastern beach suburbs of Maroubra, Clovelly, Bondi and Tamarama, a Geoscience Australia spokesman said.
"We're pretty happy to say that it wasn't an earthquake," the spokesman said.
"At this stage Geoscience Australia has not recorded any seismic activity. It would certainly have to be very, very small for us not to register it."
Radio talkback callers also reported several houses shaking on Sydney's north shore and northern beaches.
Analysis
The unusual characteristics of these tremors - repeated booming and shaking certainly not coming from an earthquake - is a telltale sign of infrasound resonance. This type of fire is caused by strong electromagnetic fields emanating from the piezoelectric limestone bedrock by transducing extra-low-frequency soundwaves.
This same phenomena was recorded a day later by Australian radar networks in a giant circular anomaly, presented above, that looks identical to crop circles from England.
Sydney (33.88S 151.21E) is 8,962 miles from the Orion pyramids of Giza, Egypt, a distance that is 36.00% of the Earth's mean circumference of 24,892 miles.
Waves of piezoelectric fires previously scorched Italy's Berici Hills and are simultaneously occurring in Ratria, India, Bodibe, South Africa, Seattle and Santa Barbara, USA.