7 thoughts on “Did rainbow clouds predict the earthquake?”

  1. that was a circumhorizontal arc or better known as a fire rainbow. it happens when ice crystals allign a certain way in only a few places in the world (or something like that) and i doubt that it had anything to do with the earthquake.

    Reply
  2. Thanks for the info. Next time I see one of these things, I’m gonna do a lot more runnin’ and a lot less filmin’.

    Reply
  3. Seems to me the animals are an unproven, though a possible predictor. The lake disappearing might be a major alarm bell (in my twisted mind), though lakes disappear all the time in the U.S. due to sinkholes and such. . . But a funny rainbow? I’m not convinced.

    And South Georgia? We had a 4.2 that woke everyone up in Atlanta about two years ago, at 5 AM – you didn’t feel that one? We’re not too far from the New Madrid fault, the largest fault in the U.S., I think. The last time it went off, 18xx, it changed the course of the Mississippi river. And the Mississippi river flowed BACKWARDS for a while. . .

    Reply
  4. Chris,

    South. As in not north. As in below the Gnat Line.

    You could have a 8.7 in Atlanta and us here in Hickory Head wouldn’t notice.

    You have a shaker up there I feel down here and you are going to be in a world of hurt.

    The Fall Line, by the way, seperates those folks in Georgia who live in an active ( more or less) reigion and those of us who do not.

    Reply
  5. I see clouds like that quite a bit in Wisconsin (maybe not quite that vivid) during the warmer months. We call them sun dogs. I can’t really see where the clouds and an earthquake could have any corolation.

    Reply

Leave a Comment