Mississippi, Jan 25: The moon Friday and Saturday night stood still directly overhead for an hour.
Last night (Sunday) it slowed but kept moving. [and from another source] Arkansas, Jan 25-26: On
Jan 24, 2005, first light was around 5:30 AM and on Jan 26, 2005 first light was around 6:30 AM. I
would say the wobble is getting worse. [and from another source] Australia, Jan 27: This morning
Sigma Octantis appeared ten degrees left of a terrestrial target suggesting Earthś South Pole axis
was moved to the right away from the rising Sun. [and from another source] New York, Jan 27: I
was staring at the night sky straight at the moon. I could swear that I saw the moon quickly shift to
the left and back to its original position. My heart skipped a beat. [and from another source] Italy,
Jan 23: I have scientific evidence of the tilt and wobble of the Earth's axis. I cut a slice of one spot
in the images of Big Bear each hour. I put them in the exact position and we can see that the line
from a spot and next is not linear .As the scope has a linear movement this line is the wobble of the
axis. In the other side I take the same spot in different day from SOHO and an Earth observer. We
can see that the angle is different by 6 degree. SOHO is correct. [Note: SOHO is not the Earth, and
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ZetaTalk: Storm Clash
is not wobbling! Earth is wobbling.]
Signs of the Times #1315
Coast Guard sends help to stalled
'Semester at Sea' ship [Jan 26]
‘Coast Guard rescuers are rushing to
a Semester at Sea research ship with
990 people on board that lost power
in roiling seas Wednesday afternoon
in the North Pacific south of the
Aleutians. A 50-foot wave smashed
through the bridge windows of the 591-foot MV Explorer around 2:30 p.m., pouring saltwater over
electrical components on board and disabling all four of its engines. The Explorer, which was en
route from Vancouver, B.C., to Japan, contacted the Coast Guard about five minutes after the wave
toppled the ship. Semester at Sea is a university program sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh.
It takes approximately 600 students from colleges and universities from across the United States and
abroad, around the world for a semester.’
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta204.htm[2/5/2012 11:55:07 AM]
ZetaTalk: Bigger and Closer
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ZetaTalk: Bigger and Closer
written Feb 4, 2005
Can Zetas provide answer as to what this is? See the image at 2005/02/02 15:18. Exposure time was 19.1
seconds according to NASA.
Debris from Planet X has been increasingly entering Earth’s atmosphere in the form of meteors or fireballs, once rare
but now reported almost weekly in the news, when they are given media attention at all. Exploding with a bang,
turning the night sky bright, rattling windows, thudding to Earth next to startled humans. Was this the usual rate just a
few years ago? For every fireball not captured by Earth’s atmosphere, there are dozens outside her atmosphere,
whizzing about, one of the reasons we have warned that Satellites will not function well in the months leading into the pole shift, and that the Space Station and those riding her are doomed. It is only a matter of time, for man’s
technology, aloft. The massive tail of Planet X, being composed primarily of magnetized iron oxide dust, is hosed
away from the N. Pole of Planet X, and thus up until now has been pointing toward the Sun, not Earth, as Planet X has
been struggling to rise above the Ecliptic and thus must align along the magnetic Flow Lines in the Sun’s southern hemisphere. These flow lines require the N. Pole of Planet X to be pointed toward the Sun, the S. Pole slung outward.
But what happens when that N. pole slings outward, during the
270° Roll that Planet X will make as it turns in place and then
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta200.htm[2/5/2012 11:55:08 AM]
ZetaTalk: Bigger and Closer
stands upright, side-by-side with the Sun in a position strong
enough to halt the Earth’s rotation in the days before the pole shift.
As the N. pole begins to sling toward the Earth, it hoses the
massive tail and the debris in that tail toward Earth. If fireballs
have been an occasional entertainment, they will soon become a daily affair almost everywhere, and simultaneously no
longer in the news as during a cover-up, such bad news is suppressed. While the SOHO still functions, these fireballs
at times make a graceful pass past the camera, moving in waves. We have, in the early days of ZetaTalk, described
why a Wave Action exists for sub-atomic particles on the move. They are on the move, and while on the move are in a dance with each other as they are in perpetual motion, either moving toward each other due to their desire to clump, or
moving away from each other to equalize crowding. This action, the wave action, and the reasons for it, are not
restricted to sub-atomic particles. The moons of Planet X likewise Dance with each other in what we have described as
Moon Swirls. The same mechanism applies, for minor debris dancing within the fringes of the massive tail of Planet X.
Did this meteor leave a twisting path? Evidently. Meteor trains that twist noticeably are rare - and even
more rarely photographed - but have been noted before. The underlying reason for unusual meteor trains
is that many meteors are markedly non-spherical in shape and non-uniform in composition. Meteors,
usually sand sized grains that originate in comets, will disintegrate as they enter the Earthś atmosphere.
Non-uniform meteors may evaporate more on one side than another. This may cause a rotating meteor to
wobble slightly in its path, and also to spray fast moving debris in a nearly spiral path. The fast moving
meteor debris ionizes molecules in the Earthś atmosphere that subsequently glow when they reacquire
electrons. Surely no meteor is perfectly uniform and spherical, so that a slight swagger that is below
perceptibility is likely typical.
NASA Explanation
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta200.htm[2/5/2012 11:55:08 AM]
ZetaTalk: Beneath the Dust
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ZetaTalk: Beneath the Dust