Earthquake warning signs:crazy cows, toads predict and forwarn,

NC Susan

Deceased
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/05/16/asia/rumors.php

Crazed cows and toad invasions? Superstitious views on the earthquake

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By Andrew Jacobs
Published: May 16, 2008
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CHENGDU, China:





Can earthquakes be predicted, their destructive impact forewarned?
Most scientists would say no. But if some insistent Chinese bloggers are to be believed, nature provided enough warning to have saved many of those who perished this week.
In the days before the deadly earthquake shook much of mountainous Sichuan Province, their stories go, ponds inexplicably drained, cows flung themselves against their enclosures and swarms of toads invaded the streets of a town that was later devastated by the quake.
"Why did the government ignore the signs?" asked a writer in one chat room. "Did they not care?"
Some bloggers have lobbed more-pointed accusations, saying that alerts by a local seismology bureau were brushed off by provincial officials. The claim has been largely debunked, but that has not stopped the spread of rumors and tall tales, some of which are proving nettlesome to the ruling Communist Party as it grapples with China's most calamitous disaster in a generation.



When a reporter asked about the rumors during a government news conference being shown live on state television Tuesday, the broadcast quickly switched to stock film of rescue efforts. When it returned to the news conference, the questions had become benign.


Later that day, officials announced the arrest of four people for spreading quake-related rumors on the Web and said they would be punished, although they did not describe the punishment or nature of the rumors.
Lest any doubters remain, the state-run Xinhua news agency ran an article on Wednesday featuring Zhang Xiaodong, a scientist at the China Earthquake Networks center, who said that seismologists, contrary to popular belief, could not accurately predict natural disasters.
"We haven't passed the test of earthquake forecasting," he said.
In China, the belief in omens and portents, often rooted in ancient cosmology, is widely held, even by the worldly and well educated. This is a culture, after all, that cherishes lucky numbers, eschews sounds that can be misconstrued as the word for death and places great value in feng shui, the practice of carefully arranging furniture and buildings to bring happiness and health.


Even the Communist Party, which ostensibly swept away the opiate of the masses with its 1949 revolution, decided to inflect the Beijing Olympics with as many lucky eights as possible: starting them on Aug. 8, or 8-08-2008, with a start time of 8:08 p.m.


While there is no way to know for sure, the current leadership may have one eye on Chinese history, which has long linked political power to the divine, a concept known as the mandate of heaven. Emperors served with the blessing of the heavens, according to such thinking, and those who turned corrupt or insensitive to the needs of the people were drummed out of power after a spate of natural catastrophes.


Whether the calamities signaled the end of a government or helped embolden their usurpers is open to interpretation.
Most Chinese can provide an earful about the "curse of 1976," the year of the deaths of Mao, Prime Minister Zhou Enlai and General Zhu De, former head of the Red Army. It was also the year an earthquake struck the northeastern city of Tangshan, killing at least 240,000 people - a quarter of its population - in one of the deadliest natural disasters in modern history.
David Neil Schmid, a professor of Chinese religion at North Carolina State University who is a visiting scholar at Zhejiang University, said it was worth noting that the seismometer was invented by the Chinese in A.D. 132 as a way to detect tremors that might spell the end of a ruler's reign. Successive dynasties employed a master of omens who would record and interpret floods, famines and other disasters. "Reading and understanding these aberrations in the natural world has always been a central aspect of Chinese culture," he said.


For China, 2008, while thanks to its eight is ostensibly a lucky year, has already brought a spate of unfortunate events. The year began with a huge winter storm that stalled the nation's rail system, stranding millions before Lunar New Year. Then came the rioting in Tibet. The government crackdown that followed has prompted a torrent of protest and international ill will that has fouled what was meant to be a "harmonious" Olympics period.


In recent weeks, the authorities in Beijing have been struggling with other calamities: an intestinal virus epidemic that started in central China and has killed 42 children, and a train collision that killed 72 passengers in eastern China.


Wang Yiyan, a professor of Chinese studies at the University of Sydney, said that even if the Communist Party leadership did not subscribe to superstitions, it was aware that many of its citizens did. The well-publicized journey of Prime Minister Wen Jiabao to the disaster zone hours after the quake could be interpreted as sound public relations or, perhaps, an acknowledgment of age-old fears.



"The government knows many Chinese will see the quake as a sign that things are out of balance," she said.
It is the story of the invading toads that seems to have gained the most traction, at least on the Internet. It did indeed occur, in some form, in Mianzhu two days before the quake hit, and many residents reacted with terror, believing it to be a harbinger of bad things to come.


In an interview on Sichuan television just before the quake, the director of Mianzhu's forestry bureau tried to calm residents by saying the mass migration was a normal part of the toad breeding season. The interview, posted on the Internet, has been provoking a torrent of angry remarks.
Ma Yi contributed research from Beijing.
 
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gdpetti

Inactive
Friday, May 16, 2008

Were toads an omen of China’s earthquake?


Days before China’s massive earthquake, hundreds of thousands of toads swarmed through a town near the epicentre, leading to a storm of speculation on whether there was a connection.

Internet blogs have been buzzing with news of the potential omen, with one website showing footage of a street in Mianyang covered by a countless number of the small brown amphibians.

But an expert put a damper on the theory. Zhang Guomin of the China Seismological Bureau said there were ‘complicated reasons’ why animals could behave abnormally. “An earthquake is only one of them, along with climate change and weather conditions,” he said.

Residents were questioned by journalists about the mass migrations of toads, many of which were squashed under cars or pedestrians. Some people replied that the toads were an omen of a disaster, while others joked that they might have come to welcome the Beijing Olympic flame. Another explanation, offered by a local forestry official, was that it was mating season.

The deputy director of China’s earthquake predicting body, Zhang Xiaodong, said his line of work would see a major breakthrough if there were some link between a natural phenomenon and an imminent earthquake. But he noted that an odd phenomenon before one earthquake may not happen again before another disaster elsewhere. “Earthquake forecasting remains a puzzle for the world,” he said. afp
fair use http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/
 

gdpetti

Inactive
That was the whole article... just a short one mentioned in their press... I can post the entire link... takes a long time to do so, so I only post the main link site ... unless someone knows a way to grab and insert the link... tried before but can't... is there a way? If you go to that site, use their search link for 'toads' and the article comes up with a couple of others. These types of 'animal' stories are usually considered 'amusing' or anedoctal and not followed up on, so I never expect any research or study into the matter.... though research has shown such events to occur regularly.
 

gdpetti

Inactive
Another one: fair use http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5igI1mejD7Ucjy6QhulU6JMdxjJFw
Frog march sparks new China quake alarm: report

8 hours ago

BEIJING (AFP) — Thousands of Chinese fled for cover in fear of an earthquake Tuesday, alarmed not only by warnings from seismologists but also by an unusual mass movement of frogs, state media said.

For the second time this month, residents observed a huge migration of frogs and toads, the state-run Xinhua news agency said.

Residents of Zunyi, a southern city that saw little damage in China's massive earthquake last week, noticed the amphibians' march on Monday, Xinhua said, quoting Vice Mayor Zeng Yongtao.

Thousands of residents camped out in fear overnight in downtown Zunyi, the news agency said.

"We don't know what else we can do," Zunyi resident Liu Yong was quoted as saying.

Their decision to move outdoors coincided with a warning from seismological authorities that there may be another big aftershock in southwestern China's Sichuan province on Tuesday following last week's massive tremor.

The May 12 earthquake -- which left more than 71,000 people dead, missing or buried in rubble -- also came after reports of unusual movement of toads.

Internet blogs showed footage of toads covering the streets of Mianyang in the days before the town in Sichuan province was ravaged by the earthquake.

Many people, at least in retrospect, took the toads as an omen of disaster.

Others, however, said that the toads had come to welcome the Beijing Olympic flame.

Local forestry officials had said the toads' movement was simply because it was mating season, although their explanations were attacked on China's lively Internet discussion boards.

Superstitious Chinese have looked for cosmic explanations for the earthquake, the country's deadliest natural disaster in three decades.

Many noted that the earthquake occurred exactly 88 days before the Beijing Olympics, which opens on August 8 -- 8/8/8 -- at 8:08 pm, in line with Chinese numerology which considers eight a lucky number.

Speculation was heightened on Sunday when China's seismological authority revised up the magnitude of the May 12 earthquake to 8.0 on the Richter scale.
Don't know how 'lucky' that day was...
 

Troke

Deceased
I had some friends that lived in the Matanuska Valley in Alaska. One day, their cattle stampeded through a fence as if it were not there and 'headed for the hills'. While everybody was wondering what was behind that, the Good Friday Earthquake of 1964 levelled large parts of the Anchorage area.

I don't know the time frame between the stampede and the quake except I think it was less then an hour. Their dogs acted strangely too, but I no longer remember how.
 

theoriginaldeb

Still A Geology Fanatic
you tube is showing very strange cloud formations upwards of thirty minutes before the quakes.........rainbow colored lights, not like the auroras, more like electrical static rainbows


links here : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzVamNQzfYA&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKMTSDzU1Z4&feature=related

Makes perfect sense....since quartz emits tones when it is under stress in the earths crust.....and quartz crystals were the basis of the first radios.
More research is needed for this one.
 

gdpetti

Inactive
This 'wave' or 3d to 4d transition energy surge is said to be the cause behind our 'global warming' (though its occurring in our entire solar system)... and the EM grid is in transition as well... the grid is going to shift to the new vibe/frequency of mind/matter in our space/time continuum. Thus, the 'critters' that are more responsive to EM shifts in their normal daily patterns of movement/breeding etc will show the 'signs' first.... we can ignore it just like we ignore the con game that is our culture/economy/govt/media/religion etc.

Either way, this 'shift' is coming, ready or not.... and the 'heat' of transition is increasing the signs around us... i.e. EQ's, volcanoes, storms, disturbance in animal migration patterns, increased sensitivity to ozone depletion, cancer etc.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Tianshui city, Gansu province. An Chinese photographer took this picture 2 hrs b4 12th May China earthquake.​
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