strange noises in wisconsin

  • #141
I meant to resurrect this thread myself last week. My aunt who lives in RI was telling us last week about the booms there. And then when I was following the Jack Culolias missing case in Tempe, I happened to see an article that they were being heard in AZ. Then happened to see an article somewhere else that mentioned them in Texas!

This is really scary. We are dedtroying the earth, in so many ways, and who knows what will happen because of it. I feel like all these strange happenings are symptoms of something bigger, and that we are hearing and seeing the painful groanings of our Mother Earth is who is very sick. :(
 
  • #142
I know of no fracking in this area

Where in Wisconsin or Ga? Because from the link Dan Weiss says this:

Dan Weiss, a senior fellow and director of climate strategy at the Center for American Progress says that even if nearby fracking was the cause, the source of the noise would have been clear to Clintonville resident
 
  • #143
Evans GA, Columbia county here. it has continued here this week last time was the 11th..been quiet so far.. but there was several here..I thought earthquake but read the seismographs in our area and nothing.. but my house shook
 
  • #144
I have tried to find evidence of fracking here and there is none
 
  • #145
I have tried to find evidence of fracking here and there is none

There is tons of evidence. Here is just one of many sites I found about it.


Wisconsin’s sandstones, especially the Cambrian- and Ordovician-age formations, are prized for their uniform grain size and high silica content. These formations are excellent sources of the raw material needed for many industrial products and processes, including hydraulic fracturing (fracking) for petroleum recovery.

http://wisconsingeologicalsurvey.org/silica-sand.htm
 
  • #146
There is tons of evidence. Here is just one of many sites I found about it.


Wisconsin’s sandstones, especially the Cambrian- and Ordovician-age formations, are prized for their uniform grain size and high silica content. These formations are excellent sources of the raw material needed for many industrial products and processes, including hydraulic fracturing (fracking) for petroleum recovery.

http://wisconsingeologicalsurvey.org/silica-sand.htm


Thanks, but I am in GA with Red Ga Clay
 

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