Wednesday, September 7, 2016

A Warning? the September 6, 2016, 3.5M earthquake at Pecos, Texas

I was relieved when nothing popped up on my news aggregation site this morning...but not for long.  The USGS Earthquake site is showing a 3.5M earthquake at Pecos Texas at 3:15PM CDT September 6:


Yellow arrow, the northern boundary of the Rio Grande Rift, blue arrow the southern boundary of the Rio Grand Rift, red arrow connection the specs of the September 6 Pecos earthquake to the turquoise dot representing Pecos Texas.  The Pecos earthquake of yesterday sits directly on top of the southernmost point of the Rio Grande Rift, the geologic fault encoded into "The Tunnel Thru the Air" and identified in message 1.

A 3.5M earthquake would hardly put ripples in a cup of coffee, but....

Pecos is on the "primary battle line" that stretches from Brownsville to El Paso along the Rio Grande and....

It occurred on September 6, 2016 at 3:15PM CDT.  How does this compare to the one and only date found in the movie "San Andreas" (which is richly encoded into TTTTA) the date and time of the LA earthquake onset according to Emma's cell phone:


September 6 at 2:13PM PDT in LA is two hours difference to CDT Pecos Texas time (Pecos/Reeves County sits on the demarcation line of CDT and MDT).  That makes the Pecos earthquake off by 62 minutes from the above.  If you considered the Rio Grande Rift as wholly existing in the MDT zone (the vast majority of it does) and not spanning two time zones, then yesterday's event is only off by 2 minutes, less than one of WD Gann's smallest cycles, that being four minutes.

The location of the Pecos earthquake at nearly the exact southern origin of the Rio Grande Rift (see Message 1 of this series) and on the "primary battle line" of TTTTA; that seems to be noteworthy.

Still, its a minor earthquake at 3.5M, not much of a "warning."  Is it minor for Pecos or the surrounding areas in Texas?

Apparently, the most recent similar earthquakes in west Texas of even noticeable strength, were considered "rare" and "almost unheard of" based an Internet search.  What would a frequency map of say the last year of U.S. earthquakes > 3.0M look like?  The USGS Earthquake Map:


1) Perhaps hundreds of earthquakes exceeding 3.0M in the last year and only 2 have occurred near Pecos; one on the day one was seemingly predicted.  Yes, it is rare.

2) Obviously, the secondary battle line from San Diego to San Francisco and continuing up to...

3) the northernmost point of both battle lines; Portland, Seattle, now expanded by message 3 to Western Canada.

4) Moderate frequency near Yellowstone which is along the northern portion of the "primary battle line" and

5) Great frequency in northeast Oklahoma, frequently blamed on fracking operations, but an area that contains a major feeder river into the Mississippi.  This area of frequency exists within the area of influence surrounding the "New Madrid Seismic Zone" that is centered on the Mississippi River.  And the Mississippi River is the crux of the "second Allied Enemy campaign" up the Mississippi to St Louis and Chicago.

[About #5, the New Madrid Seismic Zone is a 150-mile fault that runs along the Mississippi beginning at its northernmost point Cairo, Illinois, and running through New Madrid, Missouri.  Do you find the Mississippi River, and Cairo IL in TTTTA?  Indeed you do.  The last major earthquake involving this fault was in 1895 and the frequency is every 75 years +-15 years.  It is due.]

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I am not relieved that a major earthquake did not occur along the Rio Grande Rift on September 6, nor am I convinced.  Its of little immediate consequence to me living on the Atlantic Coast.  If I lived on the Pacific Coast, I'd be concerned despite the relatively modest intensity.

As I recall, the San Andreas system (7.7M in 1906), the Cascadia Subduction (9.0M in 1700 and tsunami) and the New Madrid Seismic Zone (6.7M in 1895) are all way overdue for events according to simple linear frequency mathematics.

I can't rule out September 6 as "the" warning, but that's me.  And my life does not directly depend on it.

[Hmmm, one wonders if "Pecos" is encoded in TTTTA?  I hadn't any doubt; line 13802.  Spelled with every letter and the letters are contiguous; "Pecos, TX" in red and yellow highlight.  Also line 5092 when you substitute 's' for '1 via Pythagorean table.'  And there's one more occurrence.]

Jim Ross










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