Malaysua- Indonesia sinks?

I'd like to share two videos about this subject. I don't know if this is a fake or not. Text taken from the original source:

"Video from Plane passing over there:

hmmm looks like the actual land is is sinking... sinking below the waves. maybe thats what all those earthquakes mean. the plate is going down:

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KC57GD6MZjA&feature=player_embedded#

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MRk_-_Ifz8&feature=player_embedded

Cover up by the media?"


What do you think guys?
 
Is Indonesia sinking?

I found the following video at this website.
_http://poleshift.ning.com/profiles/blogs/breaking-the-coverup]http://poleshift.ning.com/profiles/blogs/breaking-the-coverup

_http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KC57GD6MZjA&feature=player_embedded]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KC57GD6MZjA&feature=player_embedded

[mod: links disabled pending further discussion]
 
Re: Is Indonesia sinking?

hi scaloop352, could you briefly comment on what these links are about, and why you think they will be interesting to other forumites?
 
Re: Is Indonesia sinking?

The Youtube video is a fly over video showing an island in Indonesia which appears to be covered by a huge flood however when you watch the video you'll notice the flood is from the ocean so something happened which made either the island sink or the ocean rise upwards of about 10'-20' in elevation.
 
Re: Is Indonesia sinking?

skaloop352 said:
The Youtube video is a fly over video showing an island in Indonesia which appears to be covered by a huge flood however when you watch the video you'll notice the flood is from the ocean so something happened which made either the island sink or the ocean rise upwards of about 10'-20' in elevation.

I don't think this would be uncommon for Indonesia. If you look at the video, the sea surrounding the land appears to be filled with mud. Now, one might be able to make a case that this is just some mix from the ocean water and the land, but it could be that a new mud volcano has formed off the coast somewhere. Mud volcanoes are very common in Indonesia and have been known to change the nearby elevation of the seabed. For instance:

After the Aceh Quake, Mud Volcano Causes Concern
Nurfika Osman | April 26, 2010

A new undersea mud volcano is erupting off Aceh following a massive earthquake there earlier this month, a 15-member geological assessment team sent to the province has confirmed.

Officials, however, were quick to add that the new volcano was unlikely to pose a threat.

“Based on our visual observations, the volcano is not dangerous. But we are going to conduct an in-depth analysis this week of the samples we collected, so we will have a definitive answer,” said Ridwan Djamaluddin, director for mitigation and regional development at the Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology (BPPT).

Ridwan said the volcano, located near Banyak Island off the coast of Singkil district, was currently 30 meters in diameter and eight meters tall.

Local residents have claimed the seabed in the area has risen dramatically since the 7.2-magnitude earthquake on April 7.

Before the quake, the waters around Gosong Turak reef were 20 meters to 30 meters deep, but now were just five, said Mufliadi, a Banyak Island resident.


Villagers have reported seeing an undersea fissure spewing out mud and rocks, and are worried an undersea volcano could be forming, he said.

Mufliadi said the phenomenon was first noted a week after the earthquake by a fisherman who had been trawling for sea cucumbers in the waters around Pailana Island, just off Banyak Island.

“He was shocked and came back to tell us what he had seen because that site is a prime fishing spot for local fishermen,” but now there are no fish there, Mufliadi said.

The geologists, who traveled to the province last week at the request of Aceh Governor Irwandi Yusuf, confirmed there were no fish in the area.

“The fish around the area have gone and the water has become turbid,” Ridwan said, adding that the water temperature had risen from 27 degrees Celsius to 32 degrees.

To prevent worried residents from fleeing the area, Ridwan said the team would work quickly to analyze the samples it had collected.

“We still have to conduct an in-depth analysis of this,” he said, adding that if the mud and rocks contained methane, it would be dangerous.

This mud volcano in this article isn't in the area that is mentioned in the poleshift article, but given the geology of Indonesia I think another mud volcano is likely the cause. Also, in the article above, the seabed rose instead of fell, but it could probably go either way depending on the local geology of where the mud volcano is situated over.

Now as far as what is causing the mud volcanoes to go off, this is likely due to out-gassing of methane, which, in a round-about way is related to earth changes, but not as dramatic as entire plates sinking! Methinks Nancy and the Zetas are at it again... :rolleyes:

ADDED: Then again, the Greenland sunrise anomaly this year is another factor to consider. It could be that the plates are changing elevation to a very small extent, but it wouldn't cause what is shown the video above. The change seen in the video is too localized to be due to plate movement, OSIT. Then again, the poleshift page says nothing about plates, that's just Nancy Lieder's interpretation found here:

_http://poleshift.ning.com/forum/topics/zetatalk-chat-for-january-22?id=3863141%3ATopic%3A282636&page=2#comments
 
Hi Pirataloko,
The footage was mostly likely filmed after a recent earthquake along the subduction zone of Indonesia. These subduction quakes do change the elevation of land in Indonesia - sometimes raising it and sometimes lowering it.
There's a good program that explains the work that has been done to analyse changes in Indonesian coral which gives a record of drops/rises as well as a potential timeline for when larger quakes (<7) can be predicted. It is the History series How the Earth Was Made, season one, program "Tsunami".
Cheers!
 
Re: Is Indonesia sinking?

Greetings,
I just spotted this same subject by another forum user but I'm not sure which topic I was in - earth changes maybe?
My response was based on the rises and falls to land caused by large subduction earthquakes which are common in Indonesia. There is a good program on this:
History series, How the Earth Was Made, season one, episode Tsunami.
Cheers.
 
OH !!! SORRY ABOUT THAT :-[ - I thought there were two different posts on the same subject!!! I think I'm getting my navigation confused - I was going through Earth Changes the day before and Environment yesterday (newbie trying to catch up to all the items in this site!) I could have sworn I responded to two different posts .... Wasn't the other one called "Is Indonesia sinking?"
:cry:
Cheers.
 

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom