Bak kimsenin umurunda mi? Kimse cevap yazmis mi?UMURUNDA MI?(Indianapolis, Indiana) A major eathquake may hit Turkey in the next few weeks. The epicenter of the quake which could be as strong as 8.0 on the Richter scale, will be 60 miles southeast of Bandirma. This warning is based on theory and can not be substantiated with hard facts. The recent quake in China may be only the beginning of a series of large quakes to hit along fault lines around the world, especially along middle eastern lines.
Evet alakasiz cunku bu adam bir sarlatan ve safsataci.Nedeni de surada :I watched the show, “Sightings”, on the Sci-Fi channel. There was a story about someone from the University of Hawaii who could predict earthquakes, and I would like more information. Do you have an e-mail address? If so, could you please send it to me?Nobody at the University of Hawaii predicts earthquakes. The person on “Sightings” was Michael Lee, a teacher of religion and history at Damien High School in Honolulu.I am convinced that Mr. Lee’s predictions have no merit. His basic idea is that an earthquake occurs sometime after the passage of a lunar eclipse in the area from which the eclipse is visible. The trouble is that the areas involved are huge, and his prediction windows last for as long as sixteen days after an eclipse. Since the Earth has about ten earthquakes of greater than magnitude 5 every day, Lee’s technique is guaranteed to “predict” a large number of earthquakes, regardless of whether there is actually a link between earthquakes and eclipses. Lee claims a success rate of 40%. 40% seems impressive, until you realize that if you chose locations completely at random (instead of being guided by eclipses) but otherwise followed his procedure, you would also get a 40% hit rate. In other words, Mr. Lee’s predictions are no better than completely random guesses. In saying this, however, I do not mean to imply that Mr. Lee is in any way insincere; I am sure he is convinced that his method works.You can make up your own mind after visiting Mr. Lee’s earthquake prediction web page (sitesi ucurulmus).Lutfen gazetelerde okudgunuzu herseye inanmayin, GAZETELER SAFSATA PROPAGANDASI YAPIYOR. Bakin yukaridaki linkteki adamin da hic bir bilimsel iddiasi yok.Internette okuduklarinizi saglama baglamazsaniz okuduklarinizi %99un safsata oldugunu anlayacaksiniz.
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Bak kimsenin umurunda mi? Kimse cevap yazmis mi?UMURUNDA MI?(Indianapolis, Indiana) A major eathquake may hit Turkey in the next few weeks. The epicenter of the quake which could be as strong as 8.0 on the Richter scale, will be 60 miles southeast of Bandirma. This warning is based on theory and can not be substantiated with hard facts. The recent quake in China may be only the beginning of a series of large quakes to hit along fault lines around the world, especially along middle eastern lines.
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Hakikaten bu ne ya…
Google Scholar’dan asagidaki anahtar arama ile donen makaleler :anatolia earthquake predictionvakti olanlar lutfen okuyup bize isaret etsin.
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Evet alakasiz cunku bu adam bir sarlatan ve safsataci.Nedeni de surada :I watched the show, “Sightings”, on the Sci-Fi channel. There was a story about someone from the University of Hawaii who could predict earthquakes, and I would like more information. Do you have an e-mail address? If so, could you please send it to me?Nobody at the University of Hawaii predicts earthquakes. The person on “Sightings” was Michael Lee, a teacher of religion and history at Damien High School in Honolulu.I am convinced that Mr. Lee’s predictions have no merit. His basic idea is that an earthquake occurs sometime after the passage of a lunar eclipse in the area from which the eclipse is visible. The trouble is that the areas involved are huge, and his prediction windows last for as long as sixteen days after an eclipse. Since the Earth has about ten earthquakes of greater than magnitude 5 every day, Lee’s technique is guaranteed to “predict” a large number of earthquakes, regardless of whether there is actually a link between earthquakes and eclipses. Lee claims a success rate of 40%. 40% seems impressive, until you realize that if you chose locations completely at random (instead of being guided by eclipses) but otherwise followed his procedure, you would also get a 40% hit rate. In other words, Mr. Lee’s predictions are no better than completely random guesses. In saying this, however, I do not mean to imply that Mr. Lee is in any way insincere; I am sure he is convinced that his method works.You can make up your own mind after visiting Mr. Lee’s earthquake prediction web page (sitesi ucurulmus).Lutfen gazetelerde okudgunuzu herseye inanmayin, GAZETELER SAFSATA PROPAGANDASI YAPIYOR. Bakin yukaridaki linkteki adamin da hic bir bilimsel iddiasi yok.Internette okuduklarinizi saglama baglamazsaniz okuduklarinizi %99un safsata oldugunu anlayacaksiniz.