On Feb 13, 2006, at 6:08 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



The earthquake in question was the Sumatran quake which caused the tidal wave that killed so many.

I don't understand why people would link that singe event to periodic waves that have been around for centuries.

It certainly is true that a gyrating pair of black holes in close vicinity could trigger earthquakes, as could crustal expansion due to global warming, but I have not see anything in particular that links a quake to last Christmas. In fact, the gravimagnetic induction data would indicate a maximum of quakes in the 1846-1934 period.

Yr   dt(Yrs) W       dW    dW/dt

1696    0    151
1725   29    151.4  +0.40  +13.8
1752   27    151.2  -0.20   -7.4
1797   45    152.3  +0.10   +2.2
1811   14    151.42 -0.88  -62.9
1827   16    152.73 +1.31  +81.9
1846   19    151.12 -1.61  -84.7
1867   21    153.91 +2.79 +132.8
1887   20    151.50 -2.41 -120.5
1891    4    151.96 +0.46 +115.0
1912   21    148.18 -3.78 -180.0
1934   22    151.53 +3.35 +152.2
1945   11    150.28 -1.25 -113.6
1988   43    150.35 +0.07   +1.6
1993    8    149.47 -0.88 -110.0

Table 3 - Extreme angular velocity points

Maybe there was a big shift in some kind of data around Christmas? There is nothing special in:

http://maia.usno.navy.mil/lplot2.gif
http://maia.usno.navy.mil/yplot2.gif
http://maia.usno.navy.mil/xplot2.gif

except maybe it looks fairly quiet.

Horace Heffner

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