Earth's Axis Shifted?

Discussion in 'The Signs of the Times' started by padraig, Jul 6, 2018.

  1. padraig

    padraig Powers

     
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  2. gracia

    gracia Archangels

    I have noticed these days, the sun feels closer. That sounds insane, but the intensity of the heat out there really does feel like one's skin is burning.
     
  3. padraig

    padraig Powers

    Perhaps it is my imagination but some days too I think the light seems dimmer.

    I see Algeria recorded a temp of 51. 3 degrees celsus last week (124 F). I would instantly die.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...st-week/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.257f4c02a6ea

    [​IMG]
     
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  4. Carol55

    Carol55 Ave Maria

    I occasionally use the following site for their reports on volcanic activity around the world. It is called "The Watchers" and they posted a Natural News article about this story on the Inuits back in 2015 when the Inuits wrote to NASA about their findings. I find it to be very interesting and the following is from the article,

    What scientists report

    On April 20, 2011, CNN News reported that an earthquake moved the main island of Japan by 8 feet and shifted the Earth on its axis. They quoted Kenneth Hudnut, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey, as saying, "At this point, we know that one GPS station moved (8 feet), and we have seen a map from GSI (Geospatial Information Authority) in Japan showing the pattern of shift over a large area is consistent with about that much shift of the land mass."

    They quoted the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology in Italy, that estimated that "the 8.9-magnitude quake shifted the planet on its axis by nearly 4 inches (10 centimeters)." Astronomers concur that there has not been a shift in the earth's rotational axis, but that there have been subtle polar shifts over the last ten years. This is a change in what is called the figure axis.

    These changes are caused by continental drift, which has been shifting the location of the North Pole towards the south about 10 cms per year for the last 100 years. Teams at the University of Texas using NASA's GRACE satellite found that the North Pole's normal drifting to the south changed in 2005 and since then, the drift has been eastward. They detected a 1.2 meter change from 2005 to 2013. They conclude that the shift is caused by climate change caused by global warming. https://watchers.news/2015/03/08/inuit-elders-tell-nasa-earth-axis-shifted/

    I especially find it interesting that some of this shifting has been contributed to a large earthquake and that scientists have also stated that some of it has been gradual and has occurred over the last 100 years. Both of these things may connect this shifting of the Earth's axis to prophecy imho. A 100 years ago from when the Inuits wrote NASA would be 1915, this is the year an angel first appeared to 3 children in Fatima, Portugal.

    ****
    In terms of the current weather around the world, Quebec, Canada also experienced a bad heat wave this past week. I am offering prayers for those who died as result of this heat wave and for their families who are in mourning. Thankfully the temperature there has dropped substantially.

    Record heat wave kills 33 in Quebec
    By Bradford Betz | July 5, 2018 | http://www.foxnews.com/health/2018/07/06/record-heat-wave-kills-33-in-quebec.html
    A sweltering heat wave in Quebec this week has killed 33 people, The New York Times reported Thursday.
    The alarming number has raised the concern of health officials who have urged residents to exercise caution.
    A physician at Montreal's public health agency said the majority were 65 and older with a history of illnesses and health problems.
    Public health officials said the disadvantaged have been hit the hardest.
    Emergency services in Montreal, which reached 93 degrees on Thursday, have reported an average of 1,200 calls a day.
    "It's survival of the fittest," said one customer at a Home Depot, where 20 fights have allegedly broken out between shoppers.
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted his condolences over the 33 deaths.
    “My thoughts are with the loved ones of those who have died in Quebec during this heat wave. The record temperatures are expected to continue in central & eastern Canada, so make sure you know how to protect yourself & your family,” he wrote.
    Weather forecasts indicate the worse of the heat wave has past, estimating a high of 73 in Montreal on Friday.​
     
    Last edited: Jul 6, 2018
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  5. lynnfiat

    lynnfiat Fiat Voluntas Tua

    Maria Esperanza told of this years ago. I will try to find her exact words and post it here.
     
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  6. padraig

    padraig Powers

    Yes, I cannot think why all the Eskimos would lie about this or make it up. I suspect it is quite true. It is in line with what was said at Fatima about the angel with the flaming sword.

    People like the Inuit who live very close to nature see things and notice things the rest of us miss.

     
  7. lynnfiat

    lynnfiat Fiat Voluntas Tua

    And also this:
    The earth will shake and immense rivers of fire will rise from the depths. Sleeping giants will awake and there will be great suffering for many nations. The axis of the earth will change and My poor children will live moments of great tribulations… Return to Jesus. Only in Him will you find strength to support the weight of the trials that must come. Courage… —Pedro Regis, April 24th, 2010
     
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  8. padraig

    padraig Powers

    Wonderful quote. Thank you.

    It also ties in to what we can actually see happening in the world at the moment.

    In addition to this the axis tilt fits in with the upcoming 3 days of darkness.

    Here is an interesting Jewish take, it actually quotes Jesus as a learned Rabbi, which is kinda sweet.;

    Jasher 6:1 - “And on that day (Flood), the Lord caused the whole earth to shake, and the sun darkened, and the foundations of the world rages, and the whole earth was moved violently, and the lightning flashed and the thunder roared, and all the fountains in the earth were broken up….”


    Revelation 12-14 – “I looked when He opened the sixth seal, and behold, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became like blood, and the stars of heaven fell to the earth, as a fig tree drops its late figs when it is shaken by a mighty wind. Then the sky receded as a scroll when it is rolled up, and every mountain and island was moved out of its place.”

    http://destination-yisrael.biblesea...and-sudden-destruction-came-upon-the-ear.html
     
    Last edited: Jul 6, 2018
  9. Muzhik

    Muzhik Powers

    Yes. But it's a DRY heat.
     
  10. padraig

    padraig Powers

    Yes, thank God for small mercies.
    I must admit I like the present weather. Some like it hot.:)

     
  11. lynnfiat

    lynnfiat Fiat Voluntas Tua

    “God is for us a refuge and srrength
    a helper close at hand in time of distress:
    so we shall not fear though the earth should rock,
    though the mountains fall into the depth of the sea...”
    Psalm 46
     
  12. sparrow

    sparrow Powers

    Ha! Not here in Ontario, Canada! The sweltering humidity was oppressive! Our thermometer was buried at 50C in the sun and the humidex was higher!

    Sweltering heat topples 11 Ontario records
    High temperatures coming to the West, starting with B.C. Interior
    CBC News · Posted: Jul 06, 2012 8:25 AM ET | Last Updated: July 6, 2012
    Heat and humidity blanketed parts of Central Canada Friday, with soaring afternoon temperatures breaking 11 daily records for Ontario, including in Toronto and Ottawa.

    The sweltering weather returned after a brief reprieve on Thursday from the heat and humidity, while those in the West are bracing for scorching heat forecast for the coming days.

    In south-central Ontario, temperatures felt like the mid- to high-40s and humidex advisories were reissued for the region.



    "We'll probably see Toronto, Hamilton, Wiarton and Sarnia break temperature records for July 6," CBC meteorologist Johanna Wagstaffe said. "And we have seen daily temperature records break throughout the week."

    With the humidity factored in, it was expected to feel a lot hotter — in the 40s.

    By the late afternoon, the heat record was broken in Toronto when temperatures at Toronto's Pearson International Airport hit 36.3 C, smashing the hottest recorded July 6 from 24 years earlier. The 1988 high was 34.7 C.

    "It will get worse before it gets better. It's the kind of heat that if you're sitting still, not doing anything, in the shade, you're going to feel it. It's oppressive," Wagstaffe said.

    Ottawa also broke its daily record, according to CBC Ottawa weather specialist Teri Loretto. Friday's 34.4 C high beat the 2010 record of 34.1 C.


    Stay cool
    Heat waves can be deadly; one last summer in Quebec contributed to 10 fatalities. Here are 7 tips to keep cool.

    Humidex advisories were extended east to Ottawa and Montreal on Friday for the first time this week.

    According to Environment Canada, the 11 temperature records set in Ontario on Friday were recorded at:

    • Burlington Lift Bridge, 35.3 C (previous daily high of 33.0 C set in 2010).
    • Caribou Island, 20.1 C (previous daily high of 19.8 C set in 2000).
    • Cobourg, 33.2 C (previous daily high of 28.6 C set in 1999).
    • Great Duck Island, 25.9 C (previous daily high of 21.9 C set in 2002).
    • Mount Forest, 31.4 C (previous daily high of 30.3 C set in 2010).
    • Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier airport, 34.5 C (previous daily high of 34.1 C set in 2010).
    • Point Petre, 27.3 C (previous daily high of 27.2 C set in 2010).
    • Port Weller, 33.4 C (previous daily high of 29.3 C set in 1993).
    • Southeast Shoal, 31.3 C (previous daily high of 28.2 C set in 1999).
    • Toronto Pearson airport, 36.3 C (previous daily high of 34.7 C set in 1988).
    • CFB Trenton, 33.6 C (previous daily high of 31.4 set in 2010).
    "Canada is not the Great White North that it used to be," said Environment Canada senior climatologist Dave Phillips, noting that climate change over the past half-century has diminished what's known as the "diurnal difference" — the temperature range between the daily maximum and minimum.

    "It's the difference between the daytime high and the nighttime low. In the past, that was quite a wide difference, and so you'd get a hot day, but you can recover at night. What we're seeing now is that's narrowing," Phillips explained. "There's less of a difference between what happens during the day and what happens at night."

    Frizzy hair
    As for why some people might be experiencing bad hair days amid the sticky weather, CBC meteorologist Nick Czernkovich said humidity can cause hair to lengthen up to three per cent due to the atmospheric moisture.

    "If your hair is frizzy, this is why," he said.

    Another byproduct of the heat wave is the strain on power systems. People in Toronto were being asked to ease off on their air conditioning after a power outage in a large area of the downtown Thursday night.

    Toronto Hydro said its system was overloaded because of the hot spell. More than 6,000 homes and businesses lost power after an electrical substation overheated. Fire crews had to clear smoke out of the building before they could assess the damage.

    Hydro workers restored power early Friday morning, but officials warn the hot evenings aren't allowing the system to cool down, so there could be more problems.


    The heat wave brought a record temperature to Toronto on Friday. (John Rieti/CBC )
    A weak cold front will slide southward toward the end of the day for the Lower Great Lakes, so conditions will be noticeably drier for Saturday, with even drier air on the way early next week.

    Just as Central Canada gets some relief from the humidity, it will be the West's turn to swelter with the same hot air mass that has been affecting millions of people the U.S over the past week.

    "This high-pressure dome which has been anchoring the heat in the U.S. is shifting and will move into the western half of Canada," Wagstaffe said.

    P.O.V.

    "They will feel it in the B.C. Interior, where by the end of the weekend we'll be talking temperatures in the 40s for parts of the Okanagan Valley."

    "The heat will start to build through Alberta tomorrow and Saskatchewan for the weekend. They're looking at an extended period of temperatures in the 30s."
     
  13. padraig

    padraig Powers

    Somehow with Canada I always think of Snow and bears. I flew over it one time into Chicago and all I could see was snow, snow snow. It was just before St Patrick's Day. Weird to think of you all roasting. Prayers for all who died over there in the heat. Also especially for the homeless in all this. I can't imagine.

    I would so love to visit the Shrine of St Ann de Beaupre, I have a huge devotion to St Anne.

     
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  14. AED

    AED Powers

  15. sparrow

    sparrow Powers

    Padraig, we never used to have long, hot summers when I was a kid. No humidity. I went to Florida in June of 1978 and had never encountered humidity like that before. Now we have it every summer. This past week or 2 were exceptional though. We've always had pretty good summers here and we tend to laugh when people think it's cold here all the time :p
     
  16. AED

    AED Powers

    Like Maine but we always get a hot stretch around the 4th of July.
     
  17. Praetorian

    Praetorian Powers

    Yes, but we only have 2 seasons. Winter and July.
     
  18. Mary's child

    Mary's child Powers

    :ROFLMAO::LOL::ROFLMAO: NH too. :)
     
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  19. AED

    AED Powers

    9 months of winter and 3 months of mighty poor sledding!
     
  20. Muzhik

    Muzhik Powers

    In Minnesota, they have five seasons: Summer, Autumn, Winter, Spring, and Road Repair.
     
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