Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Unexplained Losses in
Several Landmasses Believed to be 
Sideaffect of Geomagnetic Pole Shift
By: Brock Werner
Associated Press

While Scientist scramble to explain what is believed to be a geomagnetic pole shift, evidence is mounting that it may be the cause of several other bizarre phenomena involving the loss or destruction of several pieces of land mass.

     Reports initially came in from the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station in Antarctica of a massive destruction of the Ross Ice Shelf. These reports were quickly verified by seismic activity registered from the Byrd Station, and Rothera Research Station. Meanwhile, communication has been lost from the Bellingshausen Station and Leningradskaya Station. Aerial photography shows extensive shelf-crack formantions in the Ross Ice Shelf, as well as a massive crater in the Ronne Ice Shelf. At this time, Russia, Germany, and the U.S. have declared "No comment" on whether they plan to investigate, in light of recent events that have occured worldwide. 

     Similar reports have leaked out of the White Sands Missing Range of New Mexico, an unnamed source who spoke on the oath of confidentiality advised that a "sizeable chunk" of the Black Range Mountains appeared to have "collapsed into a massive sinkhole". The same source advise that the area, the famous home of the Trinity nuclear tests, had not been subject to any sort of weapons tests in nearly three decades.

While still unclear, other reports of mile-wide or greater fissures have come from Golmund Region in China, the Rio Grande on the Texas/Mexico Border, and near Santiago, Chile.

Shortly after the pole shift, communications were lost with Halou-Nuwai'iea, a small South Pacific coastal villages with an estimated population of 450. Flyby reports from aircraft report the island is nowhere to be seen, and suspect the entire island may have fallen into a trench formed by collapsing tectonic plates, or been washed away by unexpected mega-tidal waves.




   

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