March 28, 2024

For anyone concerned that there are earth changes coming (I expect a cataclysmic pole shift to follow the magnetic pole shift we are already experiencing) any extra activity near the Yellowstone area is especially worrisome.  Of course, I live in the eastern United States and could see several feet of ash if the supervolcano there blows.

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A recent article at SHTFplan.com warns: “Scientists have said that the Steamboat Geyser in Yellowstone National Park keeps erupting erratically and they can’t pinpoint a reason.  This recent activity is a new record for the geyser, which has come back to life in recent years.

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According to the Billings Gazette, the Steamboat geysers’ eruptions are historic. This recent activity is the shortest time ever recorded between eruptions. Yellowstone National Park’s Steamboat Geyser blasted steam and water into the air at 12:52 p.m. local time on June 12. Then, three days, 3 hours and 48 minutes later at 4:40 p.m. on June 15, it blasted steam and water into the air again, according to the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS)’s Volcano Hazards Program. That’s a new record for the geyser.

The newspaper also reported that the eruptions were especially dramatic, large and loud, with one ejecting a rock that shattered a wooden post. Researchers don’t have good, tested theories to explain why geysers like one this slip in and out of active periods, according to the Gazette. Which can be translated as: we have no idea what the hell is going on, all we know is don’t panic…. The geyser set a record for the total number of eruptions back in 2018, with 32 in the calendar year, according to USGS.”

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The geyser was dormant from 1911 to 1961, a fifty year stretch without activity.  Then it gradually became much more active.  “Already in 2019, there have been 24 eruptions, six of them in June at the time of Billings Gazette’s reporting.”  That doesn’t happen without major changes deep below the surface.

Hawaii’s Mauna Loa volcano (the world’s largest) also is seeing increased seismic activity, and the threat level of an eruption there was just raised by the USGS.

I propose that currents of magma miles deep, far below the boundary between the Earth’s crust and mantle, have accelerated – and this extra heat causes more geyser and volcano activity – and in the relatively near future, will be one of the factors contributing to what Charles Hapgood called a crustal displacement – a movement of the entire surface of the planet over the core beneath – a catastrophic pole shift.

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