What Is Killing 11 Species of Sea Stars from California to Alaska?

“When you hear about 100% mortality (in 11 sea star species), it strikes me as odd because once the pathogens have gone into their host and the host dies, then they have nowhere to go and they die themselves. ”

- Ian Hewson, Ph.D., Asst. Prof. of Microbiology, Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY

 

December 20, 2013 Vancouver, B. C., Canada, and Ithaca, New York - In August this year, divers in Howe Sound northwest of Vancouver, British Columbia, in Canada, began seeing sick and dead sea stars. Strangely, the arms of the marine creatures appeared to be “melting off,” as divers put it.

 

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Updated: High Strangeness Before and After Montreal Boom and Blue Sky Flash

—“Homeland Security confirmed there was no military activity that could have caused the sounds.”

- Fire Chief Kenneth Richards Jr., Old Mystic, Connecticut

— “On Tuesday, November 26th, at 3 PM Eastern in Albany County, New York [ 224 miles straight south of Montreal and 5 hours BEFORE Montreal boom event], I heard a loud boom, saw a flash of light, and my entire apartment shook like an earthquake.”

- Resident in Albany County, New York

— “On Wednesday, Nov. 27th, at approximately 10:30 PM Alaska standard time [night after Montreal event] the sky lit up bright blue, as if it were day ... about 3 minutes later there was what sounded like an explosion that shook the cabin.”

- Resident in Talkeetna, Alaska

 

Updated December 1, 2013 Albuquerque, New Mexico - This report includes audio of a recorded boom sound in Woodland Hills, California, on Thursday, November 28, 2013, at 4:38 AM Pacific in Woodland Hills, California. It's updated below with new information from Old Mystic Fire Chief about unexplained booms the morning of November 29th in Southeastern Connecticut.

 

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Booms Continue from Montreal to Arizona

“What was that boom? What was that flash of blue-green light? And where were they coming from?”

- The Montreal Gazette, November 26, 2013

“Something big blew up over Montreal around 8 PM, November 26th.”

- WPTZ-TV News Channel 5, Burlington, Vermont

The Google pointer marks St-Lazare west of Montreal, Canada. 64 miles south of Montreal is Plattsburgh, New York. Residents in all three regions reported hearing an enormous explosive boom with a flash of blue-green light around 8 PM on Tuesday, November 26, 2013. No source of the mysteirous loud boom is known.
The Google pointer marks St-Lazare west of Montreal, Canada. 64 miles south of Montreal is Plattsburgh, New York. Residents in all three regions reported hearing an enormous explosive boom with a flash of blue-green light around 8 PM on Tuesday, November 26, 2013. No source of the mysteirous loud boom is known.

November 27, 2013 Albuquerque, New Mexico - Last night around 8 PM Eastern, residents in Montreal, St-Lazare and the surrounding Canadian region as far as Ormstow and Cornwall, Ontario, onward to Plattsburgh, New York, were literally shaken by a loud boom and a bright flash of blue-green light in the night sky. But no one anywhere – including Environment Canada and St-Lazare Mayor Robert Grimaudo – knows for certain what caused the loud, mysterious boom and light flash over so much geography. One speculation is a meteor hitting the atmosphere with a sonic boom. But mysterious booms – some with bright light flashes, usually white – have been reported around the United States since January 2011 without explanation. See November 22nd Earthfiles and November 24th Earthfiles.

 

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Minnesota Moose Dying Out Rapidly

“Something's seriously changed. 4,000 animals in one Minnesota herd are now down to 100.”

- Jim Robbins, NYTimes Science Contributor

The North Woods of Minnesota where moose are concentrated there is marked by the Google pointer. Other American regions that are also seeing a sharp decline in moose populations are Montana, Wyoming and New Hampshire.
The North Woods of Minnesota where moose are concentrated there is markedby the Google pointer. Other American regions that are also seeing a sharpdecline in moose populations are Montana, Wyoming and New Hampshire.

 

November 22, 2013 Helena, Montana - On October 24, 2013, scientists at the University of Colorado in Boulder reported that the average summer temperatures in the Eastern Canadian Arctic are higher now than during any century for perhaps as long ago as 120,000 years.

 

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Monarch Butterfly Migration At Lowest Numbers On Record

“Normally by now, hundreds of Mexico trees would be covered by wintering monarchs, but so far it's only 12 trees.”

- Lincoln Brower, Ph.D., Biologist, Sweet Briar College, VA.

 

Fall Migration map showing the 1900 to 2400 miles that Monarch butterflies travel  each fall from American regions to central Mexico's Oyamel fir forest for the winter.  Then in the spring there is a second shorter migration from southern U.S.  Graphic © Prof. Lincoln Brower, Sweet Friar College, Virginia.
Fall Migration map showing the 1900 to 2400 miles that Monarch butterflies travel each fall from American regions to central Mexico's Oyamel fir forest for the winter. Then in the spring there is a second shorter migration from southern U.S. Graphic © Prof. Lincoln Brower, Sweet Friar College, Virginia.

November 22, 2013 Sweet Briar, Virginia - Monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) living east of the Rocky Mountains in North America have flown south each fall, gathering in central Mexico's Oyamel fir forest to get through winter. This extraordinary Monarch migration is unique in the insect world. None but the Monarchs in different generations fly twice every year in fall and spring for as much as 2400 miles each way. Their destination are twelve mountaintops west of Mexico City covered with Oyamel firs. Historically when the Monarchs were healthy and not threatened by radical changes in their milkweed food and a warming climate, a billion of the beautiful orange and black creatures would fly south and literally cover some 60 acres of the fir trees.

 

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More Loud, Mysterious Booms in Kentucky and Illinois

“How do booms a mile away suddenly move over my house and we didn't see anything in the sky?”

- Jon Stewart, Deerfield, Illinois

323 miles from Deerfield, Ill. near Lake Michigan (Google pointer) southeast to Louisville, Ky.
323 miles from Deerfield, Ill. near Lake Michigan (Google pointer) southeast to Louisville, Ky.

November 22, 2013 Louisville, Kentucky, and Deerfield, Illinois - Since January 2011, my news website Earthfiles.com has received reports from all over the United States about loud boom sounds that often shake — even crack — walls, windows and garage doors, sometimes associated with bright flashes of white light in clear, calm skies - no thunder, no lightning. Everyone who hears the loud, short booms say they are definitely not sonic booms from normal aircraft breaking the sound barrier. Some earwitnesses think the booms come from above ground or from the sky. Others such as the Mayor of Clintonville, Wisconsin, experience having the bottoms of their feet hit by a painful percussion wave from something underground — even when the U.S. Geological Survey has no record of seismic activity and local civil authorities say there is no underground fracking or mining or construction to explain the phenomenon.

 

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Tennessee Gelding Killed and Mutilated Where 2 Infrared Security Cameras Aimed, But Nothing Triggered Camera

“The cameras must have been blocked somehow. The Williamson County Sheriff's detective said they had never seen a case like this before.”

- Terry MacIlvain, Owner, Mutilated Gelding, Fairview, TN

Fairview, Tennessee (Google marker) is about 20 miles southwest of Nashville.
Fairview, Tennessee (Google marker) is about 20 miles southwest of Nashville.

November 21, 2013 Fairview, Tennessee - Barbara and Terry MacIlvain met and married forty years ago. Barbara has had a career as a computer software engineer and real estate broker while Terry works in medical equipment sales. In 1977, they bought a house with a 6-acre pasture in Fairview, Tennessee, 33 miles southwest of Nashville. Terry wanted a horse to ride trails around their home. So in 1992, he bought a 5-year-old, gelded (testicles removed) Peruvian Paso Fino male he named Bomber. Barbara also got a Paso Fino gelded male she calls Fahlderido. Paso Finos are very gentle horses famous for their smooth, natural gait that is popular for trail riding. The two Paso Finos grew up forming close bonds with each other and with the MacIlvains, who loved them as family.

 

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Updated – Part 2: Nuclear Missile Sites and UFOs – Ellsworth AFB MSgt James Klancnik Speaks On The Record

“The security guard was ‘AWOL,’ absent without leave, because he was taken by this orange thing in the sky.”

“We had full Colonels in pickup trucks in the missile field looking for these lights that would park (in the air) on top of a missile site and shut the thing down. That happened probably five or six times a year. That stuff was kept very, very quiet.”

- James Klancnik, retired USAF Msgt., Ellsworth AFB, SD

 

Return to Part 1.

Updated with mp3 audio interview below / originally filed October 29, 2013 Spearfish, South Dakota - Since doing the October 24th Earthfiles and COAST broadcast about the Ellsworth AFB abduction of a Minuteman II nuclear missile site security guard from Cactus Flats Delta-09 Minuteman Missile Squadron, I have learned that those who have tried to access the files from the 1970s of this abduction incident at Cactus Flats have discovered all those files “are missing.”

 

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