View Single Post
Old 01-23-2012, 03:11 PM   #7
SweetJane
Member

How Do You Identify?:
stone femme
Preferred Pronoun?:
she
Relationship Status:
always solo
 
SweetJane's Avatar
 

Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: New Mexico
Posts: 368
Thanks: 380
Thanked 815 Times in 198 Posts
Rep Power: 4309957
SweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST ReputationSweetJane Has the BEST Reputation
Default

This is fascinating stuff. Thank you for bringing this to us.

Some of it sounds like theramin music from a 50s sci-fi flick. Some of it sounds like a huge machine. And still more sounds so rhythmic, like music.

It doesn't matter it it's in a city or the forest, on a cloudy day or in bright sunshine. And it's occurring in places where there hasn't been a lot of earthquake activity (except for the Virginia coverage) or other geothermal happenings.

I think that a lot of things could be causing this: solar winds, the earth "creaking," some sort of atmospheric/airplane/rocket tests done by governments. Or plain old extraterrestrials. (I know, laugh. But who knows who's out there.)

I'm leaning toward the music of the spheres, the celestial harmonics that planets produce. There has been some recent research that says there are literal musical scores in the heavenly bodies.
SweetJane is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to SweetJane For This Useful Post: