PREDICTION: 4.0 Earthquake in Southern Maine Rattles New England; No Immediate Reports of Damage

Oct 16, 2012 23:26



I was really pleased to see that my Blog the day before aligned with a 4.0 Earthquake that hit the New England area where "Murder She Wrote" took place.

http://rodillon.livejournal.com/4291012.html

The New England area, such as Maine, rarely has earthquakes. So people in Maine were surprised that there was an earthquake that hit on 10/16 of 2012.

My previous blog was regarding "Murder She Wrote" with actress Angela Lansbury born 10/16 of 1925. So that 4.0 Earthquake in Maine where the show is centered happened on the 87th birthday of Angela Lansbury.

On top of that, I mentioned in my post that Angela Lansbury was Mrs. Potts in "Beauty and the Beast" where the word is Pot meaning marijuana.

Front Page News reported that police returned marijuana or pot back to a Maine resident. So when you intersect "Castle" 5.4 "Murder He Wrote" that aired on 10/15 of 2012 the night before the Earthquake in Maine and the pot theme, my Blog Entry serves as a bridge or a link between the two.

The reason why I cite geological manifestations is to show that my mathematical calculations and claims that Earth is a living organism are legitimate. It's not some farfetched sci-fi fantasy.

I've been monitoring the Psychic Field and the Associated Press Feed for 8 years now. I know what to look for. I'm 99.9% positive about the anomalies I see surface in the news that coincide with other events of with mathematical symbols.

People just don't bother to look.

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Maine Police Return Stolen Marijuana to Man
By Ron Recinto | The Sideshow - 14 hrs ago

4

Thomas Davis, a licensed medical marijuana grower and caregiver, inspects his sole remaining plant after his crop …

It's not every day that police hand you $12,800 worth of pot.

But such was the case in Ellsworth, Maine, where local police officers returned the 17 stolen plants to licensed medical marijuana caregiver Thomas Davis, the Bangor Daily News reports.

The plants were taken last week from a greenhouse near Davis' home.

Police arrested and charged Aaron Pert, 32, of Trenton, Maine, with the burglary after he admitted to the crime after a car he was in was pulled over for allegedly running a stop sign. Pert eventually told police where the freshly harvested plants were stashed and police recovered the marijuana, according to the Daily News.

Now it seemed Ellsworth police had a dilemma. They didn't know whether to destroy the pot, which they would normally do with illegal drugs, or return the pot to Davis.

According to the newspaper, the police department was worried about violating federal law if officers returned the medical marijuana, which is legal under state law.

"This is new," Ellsworth police Lt. Harold Page said. "No one's dealt with this before." Page said he thinks this may be the first reported burglary of medical marijuana in the state.

Ellsworth police Chief John DeLeo said on Monday that returning the medical marijuana to Davis was legal.

Despite the return of his plants, Thomas said about 85 percent of the stolen crop is now damaged by mold, which was expected to happen the longer the plants were out of the greenhouse, the Daily News reports.

Davis, a state-licensed caregiver for three patients, also uses the marijuana himself to treat pain caused by fibromyalgia.

The theft will set him back for months, Davis told the newspaper, and he's worried his patients may have to get their medication elsewhere.

However, Davis said he hopes reporting the incident and the cooperation with local police will set a precedent in which the police will view medical marijuana the same way it views other stolen medicine it recovers.

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/police-return-stolen-marijuana-maine-man-162333011.html

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4.0 Earthquake in Southern Maine Rattles New England; No Immediate Reports of Damage, Injuries
By David Sharp,Lisa Rathke, The Associated Press | Associated Press - 4 hrs ago

PORTLAND, Maine - An earthquake that hit southern Maine Tuesday night rattled nearby New England states as far as Connecticut, including the Boston area, but caused no injuries or apparent damage.

The U.S. Geological Survey at first estimated the 7:12 p.m. quake as a 4.6 magnitude, but later downgraded that to 4.0. The epicenter, about 3 miles west of Hollis Center, Maine, is about 3 miles deep. That location is about 20 miles west of Portland.

About 10 miles away in Waterboro, about 20 customers and staff at Waterboro House of Pizza ran outside when they heard a loud bang and the building shook.

"It was loudest bang you ever heard in your life. We actually thought it was an explosion of some type," said owner Jessica Hill. "The back door and door to the basement blew open."

In nearby Saco, Sue Hadiaris said, "The whole house shook. It felt like a train was coming right through the house. It was very unnerving because you could feel the floor shaking. There was a queasy feeling."

Afterward, Hadiaris called her 15-year-old niece in Falmouth to make sure she was safe. "She said, 'We can cross that off our bucket list. We've lived through an earthquake,'" Hadiaris said.

Lynette Miller, a spokeswoman for the Maine Emergency Management Agency, said her dogs started barking several seconds before the quake. "It was several seconds of good shaking but nothing falling down," Miller said from her home in Readfield, about 60 miles north of Portland.

The Seabrook Station nuclear plant, about 63 miles away in New Hampshire, declared an unusual event - the lowest of four emergency classifications, but said it was not affected. The plant has been offline for refuelling .

"There has been no impact at all to the plant from the earthquake and our refuelling maintenance activities have not been affected," said Alan Griffith, spokesman for Next EnergyEra Seabrook Station.

Jim Van Dongen, public information officer for the New Hampshire Department of Safety said New Hampshire 911 got about 1,000 calls in the first hour after the quake, but they later dropped off. He said no major damage was reported.

Brief, but noticeable shaking was felt in downtown Boston and the surrounding area.

In Melrose, just north of Boston, Peter Ward said the shaking he felt seemed to last about four seconds. "It felt like a big gust of wind shaking the house. I don't want to overstate it, but the glass did rattle a little," he said.

Former Maine resident Victoria Brett, who also has lived in San Francisco, felt the quake in Northampton, Mass.

"At first, it felt like something slowly wiggling the outside walls of the house. Then the table and floor started vibrating. I looked around and the water in the glass flower vase looked like a wave pool. I knew right away it was an earthquake," she said.

Earthquakes are rare in New England but they're not unheard of. In 2006 there was a series of earthquakes around Maine's Acadia National Park, including one with a magnitude of 4.2 that caused boulders to fall from ledges onto Acadia National Park's loop road. One of the park's trails was closed for three years because of damage from the quake.

The strongest earthquake recorded in Maine occurred in 1904 in the Eastport area, near the state's eastern border with Canada, according the Weston Observatory at Boston College. With a magnitude estimated at 5.7 to 5.9, it damaged chimneys and brick walls and could be felt in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.

East Coast quakes are rarely strong enough to be felt over a wide area. A quake of magnitude 5.8 on Aug. 23, 2011, was centred in Virginia and felt all along the coast, including in New York City and Boston. Experts say the region's geology can make the effects felt in an area up to 10 times larger than quakes of similar size on the West Coast.

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Rathke reported from Montpelier, Vt. AP reporter Sylvia Lee Wingfield contributed from Boston.

http://news.yahoo.com/4-0-earthquake-southern-maine-rattles-england-no-022205501.html

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