Watch the New Madrid Fault - 'Fluid Displacement'
Mitch Battros - Earth Changes Media
The Midwest United States along with its East Coast is at high risk to earthquakes due to unsettled fault zones, as a result of 'Katrina'-like floods occurring in at least five states. Those areas at risk are Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois. The Mississippi and other rivers across the upper Midwest have overrun their banks in recent days. Note: 'Fluid Displacement' occurs in polarized ways. This is to say - when fluid is increased such as the record-breaking floods along the Mississippi river, pressure in "added" to tectonic plates causing them to shift. When fluid is removed or decreased - such as tons of oil leaving Earth's mantle due to a man-made bored hole, this reduces pressure on tectonic plates which also causing them to shift. Read: A Personal Eyewitness Report of Midwest Catastrophe to ECM The New Madrid Fault is prone to mega-quakes. Earthquakes so large, it caused the Mississippi to run backwards ... that's right, the largest river in the United States ran backwards. The New Madrid zone had four of the largest North American earthquakes in recorded history, with moment magnitudes estimated to be as large as 8.0, all occurring within a three-month period between December 1811 and February 1812. With fluid (oil) gushing out not far from the mouth of the Mississippi, and record floods occurring up-river along longitude meridians, has geologists pouring over possible seismic outcomes. No one knows for sure how this will unfold. As one geologist said when asked what might happen: "We don't know - it's never happened before." We are reducing our cost of the ECM news service due to current circumstance. It has always been our mission to be a conduit to you - direct from top scientists in geophysics, honored elders from indigenous scared tribes, and front-line emergency management workers from FEMA, Red Cross, Doctors without Borders, and more.