While following up on the ‘UFO Mystery in Australia‘-the sighting by hundreds of witnesses in Maryborough, Queensland of mysterious orange lights that continue to appear in the skies since last week, lights unexplained by authorities or ‘experts’, we discovered two new reports from the Fraser Coast Chronicle:
New video footage of the lights ‘taken Tuesday night’, and, another news report, Super Moon ‘behind wild weather‘.
[Snip]
AN ALARMING email has been doing the rounds of the Fraser Coast and has claimed that a “super moon” cycle is to blame for Queensland’s wild weather this summer, with more on the way.
The email states that in an 18.6-year cycle, a “super moon” occurs when a new or full moon is at 90% or greater of its closest approach to earth.
The scientific name for such a phenomenon is the slightly less exciting “lunar perigee”.
The chain email lists a number of dates going back almost 60 years, which coincide with floods in 1955, 1974, 1992 and 2011 – each 18-19 years apart.
It then states that on March 19, the super moon cycle for this year will be at its closest, warning that further flooding is on the way.
According to the Fraser paper, the ‘last date can verified by science’:
At the very least, this last date can be verified by science, with the Bureau of Meteorology confirming that on March 19, the moon will be the closest it has been to earth in 18 years, at a distance of “just” 356,577km.
The verdict on the email from the regional Bureau spokesman: ‘Gossip!’
Was the email related to astrologer Richard Nolle? Nolle was mentioned by D.C.’s ABC 7 Stormwatch Weather blog post, Extreme Super Moon 2011 to cause destruction?:
Don’t be alarmed if come March 19 you find your astrology-reading friends clunking around in hip waders and full-face helmets with fire extinguishers under their arms. You see, that Saturday falls upon a scrotum-tightening event known in astrological circles as an Extreme SuperMoon.
The popularizer of this to-the-max moniker appears to be Richard Nolle, a diviner of the stars who Sightings credits with predicting the 1993 terrorist bombing at the World Trade Center. An Extreme SuperMoon occurs when a new or full moon coincides with the big rock’s closest orbit to earth, Nolle says. The coming SuperMoon (which is also known as a Full Worm Moon) will be so extreme (221,566 miles away) that a similar event hasn’t been seen since 1993 – it’s almost an Extreme SuperDuper moon.
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