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Amateur video from Falköping, Sweden.
Video from Louisiana. A comment said they could have been hit by a radar sweep. Early reports on the very first incident mentioned - though rarely - burn-like injuries. I myself wonder if maybe some secret satellite projecting a beam - for terrestric measurments via radar or microwaves - also could have something to do with it. But it seems to be always just one species in one place being effected. Maybe they share a biological feature that is unique to them. Like whales or dolphins being irritated by sonars, and then hitting a beach. Changes in the magnetic field...? - Just a far-fetched speculation of mine. Solar radiation phenomenon? Also far-fetched, I know. Bird flu...? :timeout: |
I saw it before, but I find it hard to believe a potential bird flu, but because it has happened in many places worldwide, there is reason to make a proper inquiry into the atmosphere with infrared technology and the help of satellites that can measure other important sources of information
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I now Sky, :DL
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Around 2 million dead fishes discovered at Chesapeake Bay, Maryland.
I wonder if these many incidents really are connected and are correctly attributed to a shared cause. Maybe they are just a statistic anomality - that could happen. There is no guarantee for a pattern of always normal distribution. |
Strange phenomena, but even historically has such events occurred in the past
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I don't believe that nonsense.. Fireworks.. lol... why not aliens.. hahaa..:har:
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The videos
Fishes http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXnCx...&feature=feedf Birds http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrlH3BgKPxk&NR=1 Money http://lincolnrainmakers.com/money_rain.jpg You wish.... |
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'Aflockalypse' Not Now: Mass Bird Deaths Rare, Not End of World, Experts Say.
Birds falling from the sky worldwide - like the 700 turtledoves that mysteriously fell in the northwestern Italian city of Faenza - are freak events without unusual but not apocalyptic causes, experts say.Storms, hail or lightning can kill birds while tornadoes or waterspouts may suck up small fish or frogs and drop them far away. Human causes, such as fireworks, power lines or a collision with a truck, may explain avian deaths.That hasn't stopped doomsday theorists from dubbing the incidents "aflockalypse," however, or limited the end-of-the world talk. In the latest incident, turtledoves that are often seen throughout the area left behind a scene evocative of a Hitchcock movie as their carcasses piled up over the last five days, according to local news agency Corriere della Sera. http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/...ths-end-world/ Note: Update record,Published January 07, 2011 |
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