View Full Version : Dead sea creatures “covering the sand with a sea of red” on California beach
EE_
24th March 2015, 03:11 AM
No one has ever seen all these things washing up and dying before. The list is growing.
No one has ever seen (or knows about) a triple melt down/China syndrome that has been pouring billions of gallons of nuclear waste into the ocean for 4 years, across the pond from the west coast.
No one has ever seen a major nuclear disaster this totally blacked out by the governments/MSM either.
http://i.embed.ly/1/display/resize?key=1e6a1a1efdb011df84894040444cdc60&url=http%3A%2F%2Fpbs.twimg.com%2Fmedia%2FB-jiMi-CYAAR-j2.jpg
Dead sea creatures “covering the sand with a sea of red” on California beach; Witnesses: “Bazillions of crab-like things washed ashore… I’ve never seen these before, it’s incredible” — ‘Glow in the dark’ organisms recently stranded nearby; Official: “No one here has ever seen it!” (VIDEO)
Published: March 23rd, 2015 at 9:34 am ET
By ENENews
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240 comments
Orange County Register, Feb 25, 2015 (emphasis added): Tiny crabs still coming in waves off Balboa Island — Thousands… created a rim of red along the shoreline, scattered on the sand along the sleepy seaside of Balboa Island in Newport Beach… Experts say the crabs – which are about 1-to 3-inches long – haven’t been seen in the area for decades… The pelagic crabs are the latest in a year of odd sightings… glow-in-the-dark organisms called pyrosomes washed ashore in September, and before that a blue, jellyfish-like creatures…
CBS L.A., Feb 22, 2015: [E]xperts say the crab hadn’t been seen this far north in decades… Passers-by stopped to marvel at the unusual sight… Daniel Stringer, who’s lived on Balboa Island for 47 years, says he’s never seen the little crabs…
Newport Beach Independent, Feb 26, 2015: Thousands of tiny crabs that look like mini lobsters washed up on the shores of Balboa Island this week, covering the sand with a sea of red… They appeared on Balboa Island several weeks ago and then disappeared, but have reappeared. Most appear to have washed ashore dead, but many are still swimming in… crews have been scooping up [remains].
LA Times, Jan 22, 2015: [T]housands of candy-red crabs rarely seen in coastal Southern California have washed ashore in Newport Beach… this marks the first time in years that [Southern California Marine Institute director Daniel Pondella] has heard of them being seen in Southern California. “This is the first warm year we’ve had in quite awhile,” he said. “It could just be a sign of the warm water we’re currently experiencing.”… “I’ve never seen these things before,” [Newport Beach resident Darren Zinter] said. “It’s incredible.”
Tweet from @MLukeMc, Feb 23, 2015: Bazillions of crab-like things washed ashore [see photo].
Tweet from @ABC7Greg, Feb 23, 2015: Thousands of dead crabs washed up on shore on #BalboaIsland. Residents want to know why! (Photo: Tim Sullivan) @ABC7
More on the pyrosomes:
Corona Del Mar Today: Pyrosomes Wash onto Big Corona Beach… something not been seen before in Corona del Mar, a city expert said. “Pyrosoma is a glow in the dark pelagic tunicate,” said Michelle Clemente, a Newport Beach marine education supervisor, in an email. “Although it is not uncommon to our waters…no one around here has ever seen it!”
OC Register: The ocean oddities arrived all summer. The glow-in-the-dark organisms called pyrosomes washed ashore… jellyfish-like creatures [were] a bit earlier… “These are strange times,” said Chris Lowe, a professor and head of the Shark Lab at Cal State Long Beach… “It’s tricky,” Lowe said. “The animals are acting as if we’re going to have an El Niño, but the ocean’s conditions aren’t conclusive.”
http://enenews.com/dead-sea-creatures-covering-sand-sea-red-california-bazillions-crab-like-washed-ashore-ive-never-before-incredible-nearby-glow-dark-organisms-recently-stranded-official-one-around-video
singular_me
24th March 2015, 03:54 AM
dont know if I'd believe this, that very red is the color when they are cooked.
edit:
but I have no doubt that oceans are polluted to a point that is almost beyond repair.
Glass
24th March 2015, 04:03 AM
so. I feel very tired sometimes. Just the effort it takes to try and grasp how other people can not see. They just can't. Not even a curious thought about the things they see. I suppose they will be waiting to find out the answer on the 6 o'clock news if any of them do want to know.
The pestilence, for want of a better word, plague? seems to be building in intensity. Prophetic?
How does it go again Ponce?
I'm starting to think moving inland might be a key to survival. Certainly get out of the west coast. Do what ever needs doing but get the hell out.
EE_
24th March 2015, 04:27 AM
Funny how people are easy to talk about doom when it happens somewhere else, but not when it hits home.
Part of the reason for such silence, is so many are so heavily invested what happens on the west coast.
If it was exposed for what it is, the damage to business and real estate would be so great it would collapse the entire economy.
People closely related to the coastal US, really only care about themselves, their money/property values/businesses...they really don't care about the economy of the rest of the country. It's just the nature of people.
We are now living in a world where money trumps everything, God, country, family and people. Of cource, not for you or I, but in general.
In reality, we all should be concerned and speaking up, because this is affecting all of us, and not just in the US.
This is only playing out first on the west coast, but it's coming for all of us.
As always, just my opinion, I could be wrong.
Sea Creatures Dying In Massive Numbers Along Pacific Coast! Fishing Industry In Midst Of Collapse!
When it comes to food, the United States is quite diverse in its palette and selection. We have French, Italian, Chinese (primarily New York Style), Japanese, German, and many others from countries around the world. One such form – or genre if you might say – Americans love is easily seafood. According to Seafood & Human Health, Americans eat an average of 4.833 billion pounds of seafood. In further detail, it accounts to 15.8 pounds of fish and/or shellfish per person. Half is farmed while the other half is wild caught, which may not be good especially if it so happens to be shrimp.
Unfortunately for Americans, there might be a sudden drop in the availability in seafood as reports come in that millions of sea creatures are dying off the Pacific coast.
According to Natural News, a new study shows that 98 percent of the ocean floor off the California coast is covered in dead sea creatures. This is a scary sign for researchers because it appears as if the Pacific Ocean is dying. as originally reported by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) in California discovered this and stated that the amount of dead sea creatures is higher than it has ever been in the 24 years of monitoring. They do believe they’ve found out the source of the sudden spike in sea creature deaths: the nuclear fallout from Fukushima.
National Geographic also covered the study recently but did not pin the situation with the dying off of sea creatures to Fukushima. Instead, the timing pins the Japanese disaster as a possible cause but not the cause. It should also be noted that the high amount of “sea snot” – the name given to the masses of dead sea creatures – has skyrocketed since the Fukushima incident. Christine Huffard, marine biologist at MBARI and leader of the study to National Geographic, confirmed this by stating:
“In the 24 years of this study, the past two years have been the biggest amounts of this detritus by far.”
Freedom Outpost also followed up on this situation by reporting statistics that will have a major effect on the seafood industry in the United States. As a matter of fact, they list a total of fifteen disturbing examples of this disastrous phenomenon.
Sea stars are turning into piles of goo.
Bluefin tuna has declined by 95 percent.
Sardine, anchovy, and herring populations have dropped dramatically.
Record numbers of distressed sea lions have washed ashore in California.
Marine birds are disappearing from the Pacific northwest.
The seafood industry is noticing unusual mutations.
Pelicans are refusing to mate.
Oyster population is falling at an exponential rate.
Sockeye salmon is at a historical low in population.
Something is causing herring to bleed from their gills, bellies, and eyeballs.
Very high levels of cesium-137 have been discovered among plankton in the Pacific Ocean.
Six tons of anchovies died in Marina Del Ray over a single weekend.
Thousands of dead fish were found on Capitola Beach.
Thousands of dead fish were found on Manresa Beach.
Radiation levels have tripled in tuna caught off the coast of Oregon.
A lot of those foods, either enjoyed or not, are primary assets in the fishing industry. The fact reports show a sudden decline is a worrisome for those who make a living from the harvesting of said sea creatures. Once again, the possibility of the Fukushima incident is brought up.
SHOCKING Photos! "Pacific Ocean Now Dead From Fukushima Radiation"
Horses Skin Melt Off In California...Fukushima? Are We Next?
'Kids die, govt lie!' Ex-mayor exposes real scale of radiation in Fukushima (FULL INTERVIEW)
FUKUSHIMA RADIATION, & STRANGE HAPPENINGS ON WEST COAST
James Corbett - We Are Headed for Global War, Fukushima Update and More!
Now we want to know what you think. Do you believe the Fukushima incident is to blame for the sudden collapse in the sea creature economy? What is scarier to ask, from the points above, will there be an sudden spike in human illnesses related to radiation if people who eat seafood continue to eat seafood affected by the Fukushima incident? Let us know int he comments below.
http://www.inquisitr.com/1416252/sea-creatures-dying-in-massive-numbers-along-pacific-coast-fishing-industry-in-midst-of-collapse/
EE_
24th March 2015, 05:08 AM
dont know if I'd believe this, that very red is the color when they are cooked.
edit:
but I have no doubt that oceans are polluted to a point that is almost beyond repair.
The ocean will repair itself when we are gone. It may take a million years, which is a drop in the bucket of time, but I think the earth is pretty resiliant. Many civilizations have come and gone throughout history, but I don't believe there's ever been such a spike in population as we've had in the past 100 years. We will be no different.
Modern man has created so many things capable of destroying civilation, that it's only a matter of time. That time may be closer then we think.
Does it really matter in the grand scheme of things? We are only here for a mere speck of time compared to eturnity.
Hitch
24th March 2015, 09:23 AM
I don't see how anything this year can be attributed and directly linked to fukushima along the pacific coast. This year is different, it's an el nino year.
More specifically quoted:
"El Niño's warm rush of nutrient-poor water heated by its eastward passage in the Equatorial Current, replaces the cold, nutrient-rich surface water of the Humboldt Current. When El Niño conditions last for many months, extensive ocean warming and the reduction in easterly trade winds limits upwelling of cold nutrient-rich deep water, and its economic impact to local fishing for an international market can be serious."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Ni%C3%B1o
EE_
24th March 2015, 10:19 AM
http://www.imgwapper.info/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/pacific-ocean-current-map-rdvn1mvl.jpg
EE_
24th March 2015, 10:30 AM
By Deanna Conners in
BLOGS | EARTH on Mar 15, 2015
El Niño has arrived, says NOAA
After months of anticipation, the NOAA Climate Prediction Center finally issued an El Niño advisory on March 5. How will it affect your weather?
After several months of speculation due to borderline conditions in the Pacific Ocean, El Niño is finally here, according to scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Climate Prediction Center. They issued an El Niño advisory on March 5, 2015. While El Niño events typically trigger changes in the weather across the globe, the current El Niño event is weak and is therefore not expected to have substantial and widespread impacts on global weather in the near future. Unfortunately, this means that the drought-stricken western United States will likely not receive enough rain to end the current drought cycle. At the same time, NOAA said:
… certain impacts often associated with El Niño may appear in some locations during the Northern Hemisphere spring 2015.
Those impacts could include a cooler, wetter spring for some. The presence of an El Niño may also mean fewer hurricanes after hurricane season begins again June 1.
Sea surface temperature patterns in the Pacific Ocean during El Niño (warm) and La Niña (cold) events. Image via NOAA.
El Niño events reoccur about every 2 to 7 years and are associated with warmer sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean along the equator. An El Niño is an often dramatic illustration of the integral link between Earth’s oceans and atmosphere. The Scripps Institution of Oceanography said:
Typically, the ocean surface warms up by a few degrees Celsius. At the same time, the place where hefty thunderstorms occur on the equator moves eastward. Although those might seem like small differences, it nevertheless can have big effects on the world’s climate.
Those big effects may be typical … but perhaps not this year.
Ocean conditions characteristic of an El Niño event have been in place since November 2014, but atmospheric conditions over the past few months did not meet the criteria for issuing an El Niño advisory. During the past month, changes in westerly winds and precipitation patterns over the ocean have shifted to a more favorable El Niño-like signal. Hence, scientists finally issued the March 5 El Niño advisory.
Scientists predict that there is a 50% to 60% chance that the current El Niño event will continue throughout northern summer of 2015.
http://earthsky.org/earth/el-nino-has-arrived-says-noaa
Horn
24th March 2015, 10:37 AM
http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/sst/latest_sst.gif
Horn
24th March 2015, 10:50 AM
They'd like to call it an El Nino' but its lacking large components of an El Nino'.
one of which is warmer surface in central pacific, the other drenching storms in California.
Its really just a massive recycling jet stream coming from Fukishima area. Appears to be breaking down currently.
http://www.stormsurfing.com/cgi/display_alt.cgi?a=glob_250
Hitch
24th March 2015, 11:57 AM
They'd like to call it an El Nino' but its lacking large components of an El Nino'.
one of which is warmer surface in central pacific, the other drenching storms in California.
Its really just a massive recycling jet stream coming from Fukishima area. Appears to be breaking down currently.
http://www.stormsurfing.com/cgi/display_alt.cgi?a=glob_250
Well, I know for fact that the el nino is what's causing some of the issues with the sea lions, locally. They have to go farther out to sea for food, so some of the mothers have to abandon their pups, for their own survival.
Furthermore, I've just learned today, that the sea lions are getting a lot more aggressive. There's been a couple of attacks on people recently, with injuries. One of the attacks was on a woman, and the lion dragged her into the water, at night, resulting in a dramatic rescue. Thankfully, everyone is ok so I've heard. The problem is that at night you can't see them often. Something I need to be concerned with going for a night walk on the beach at sunset.
Plus, they jump up on the dock right next to you while you are walking, scaring both you and the lion. That just happened to me yesterday. I was walking along and out of nowhere a 600 pound male leaped out of the water right at me.
Something is unusually 'off' with these lions. I don't know if the shortage of food and el nino, or maybe fuku. I wish someone could confirm this with radiation tests on the water.
Horn
24th March 2015, 12:23 PM
The cold current down coastal California is/was being undermined by the blocking high pressure ridge above California. And vacuum northwards near termination of the powering jetstream. Its not an "El Nino" by definition its more or less strong cycle half pattern, appears to be reducing itself currently.
You could get some heavy mudslides there soon once the ridge slides out of the way. Its been hangin around there for like 2 years now.
Check this creamy link....
http://mp1.met.psu.edu/~fxg1/SAT_NHEM/animw.html
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