Russians face freezing chaos [Jan 19] 'But if you think it sounds cold in Moscow, how about this.
Last week, the city of Tomsk in western Siberia declared a state of emergency when temperatures
fell to 57C. Sorry, I mean minus 57C. It was so cold most people's thermometers were no use any
more as they do not go past minus 40C. Some of the oil wells in Siberia have frozen, and Russia is
producing 200,000 barrels of oil a day less than it was last month.' [and from another source]
Midwest savoring January warm spell [Jan 13] http://www.usatoday.com/ 'People here are
shedding their wool coats, rolling down their car windows and wondering where's winter as bright
sunshine Thursday sent temperatures to a high of 55. The above-normal temperatures stretching
across the Midwest and east to Boston are part of an unusual pattern that won't change any time
soon, said meteorologist Mark Ratzer of the National Weather Service.' [and from another source]
Many parts of Canada experiencing warm January [Jan 30] 'Most parts of Canada are
experiencing one of the warmest winters on record. It has been a sunny and warm January, with
average temperatures above seasonal norms, in some cases by as much as 10 degrees.'
Signs of the Times #1541
Earth's magnetic pole drifting quickly [Dec 8] http://www.usatoday.com/ 'Earth's north magnetic
pole is drifting away from North America and toward Siberia at such a clip that Alaska might lose
its spectacular Northern Lights in the next 50 years, scientists said Thursday.' [and from another]
Miners Surface after Saskatchewan Fire [Jan 30] 'All 72 miners trapped by a fire in a potash mine
in Saskatchewan were brought to safety by rescuers early Monday, a day after the workers took
refuge from the smoke and flames.' [and from another] It appears we Canadians with our heavily
regulated mining industry in Saskatchewan has its uses after all. You speak of increasing signs of
torque effect such as rail road derailments (which here in western Canada, our incidents are
increasing exponentially) and industrial fires. So I guess we will be seeing a lot more mining
emergencies in the news as well!
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta260.htm[2/5/2012 9:57:19 AM]


ZetaTalk: Tail Wafting
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ZetaTalk: Tail Wafting
written Mar 8, 2006
These photos were taken in Fort Lauderdale, FL on March 4, 2006. She used a Kodak digital camera
CX7530 5.0MP.[and from another] Using always my digital cam REVIA KD-220Z in Italy on March 7,
2006. The corpus seems smaller than the previous image and on the left side of the Sun. [and from
another] I wonder if these are moon swirls in the tail?
When Planet X became visible in early 2001 as a dim blur viewed at observatories, or as what appeared to be a very
dim star in infrared images in early 2002, or as a star not on the star charts during CCD imaging in the Fall of 2002, the shrouding dust cloud and tail of Planet X was either not an issue or was seen to be trailing behind the rapidly
moving planet. When it put on the brakes as it arrived at the Sun, in the Summer of 2003, the tail logically wafted past
the halting Planet X to blow past the Sun and deposit some red dust on the Earth. It also interfered with the electric
grid in many countries in August-September of 2003, creating surges and brownouts, crashing the grids. Then the dust
cloud settled into clinging to and blowing outward from the N Pole of Planet X, which was pointing toward the S Pole
of the Sun as it rounded it and moved up toward the Sun's middle. Thus, from Dec, 2003 to the recent past, the tail was
blowing toward the Sun, and the debris and red dust and many dramatic bright moon swirl dances not as much in evidence. 2004 and into 2005 were a relatively quiet time, tail wise, as Planet X gradually rose to the Ecliptic, while
rounding the Sun, and started outbound toward the Earth, trapped in her halted orbit in front of Planet X.
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta266.htm[2/5/2012 9:57:20 AM]


ZetaTalk: Tail Wafting
We have stated that as Planet X does a slow 270° roll to
position itself to be above the Sun's Ecliptic, where it will point
its S Pole at the Sun's N Pole and quickly exit the solar system,
it first must swing its N Pole away from the Sun. It does so in a
retrograde manner, as it rotates retrograde and is in a retrograde
orbit while passing the Sun. As the N Pole swings round to the
right, as viewed from the northern hemisphere, the tail likewise
begins to appear to the right of the Sun. The Earth, desperate to
escape the hose of magnetic particles coming from the N Pole
of Planet X, leans to the left as far as possible in the eddy flow
of particles it is trapped in, caught in the path of Planet X,
moving steadily and inexorably toward the Earth as it leaves