Vatic Note: Hmmm, another test run on the space weapon? Same with the big noise over at the Denver International Airport near Arvada. What is really strange is yesterday 1/10/12, I actually saw two suns separate but right next to each other. One a little bigger than the other. It was close to about 4 pm in the sky and the chemtrails were not thick enough to block the shapes of the two bodies, one being our sun. So I am wondering if there are movements in the earth from that or from the space weapons? Hard to say.
http://inexplicata.blogspot.com/2012/01/costa-rica-authorities-cannot-ascertain.html
By: La Nación (Costa Rica)
Date: 2012-01-09
Costa Rica: Authorities Cannot Ascertain Source of Midnight “Explosion”
Source: La Nación (Costa Rica)
Date: 09 January 2012
www.nacion.com/sucesos
San José (Hilda Miranda – Newsroom). The loud noise resembling that of an explosion was heard by dozens of people around midnight yesterday hitherto lacks any explanation by officialdom.
Neither the National Meteorological Institute (IMN) nor the OVISCORI (Costa Rican Vulcanology Observatory) have any records of a phenomenon that could have been responsible for the loud reverberations.
According to hundreds on the social networks, a powerful report -- lasting more than five minutes – was heard around midnight yesterday.
Reports from readers of La Nación on Facebook suggest that the reverberations were heard in parts of San José and in more remote communities such as Turrialba, San Ramon, Coronado, Heredia, Escazú and others.
According to the IMN, the atmosphere’s behavior in recent hours was normal. “Experts checked the satellite signal and no record of any anomalous situation was found,” stated Mario Sánchez, the agency’s press officer.
Similarly, the Observatorio Vulcanologico y Sismológico de Costa Rica (OVSICORI) informed that there was no record of any strong tremor that could have given rise to the loud buzzing.
Another version that made the rounds held that the explosions were from festivities in the town of Zapote, but the parties in charge of the celebrations dismissed this conjecture.
“The fireworks were normal. We are aware of that noise, but we don’t believe that it has anything to do with the festivities at Zapote, because people heard it in places far from [the community],” said Rafael Arias, an advisor to the San José city hall.
Arias further noted that the closing cannonade was at approximately 9 p.m., but that unauthorized parties discharged a series of “bomblets” around 12 a.m. “But it wasn’t a loud sound either,” he noted.
Some readers also stated that lights in the sky accompanied the loud noise.
(Translation (c) 2012, Scott Corrales, IHU. Special thanks to Alex Astua)
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
http://inexplicata.blogspot.com/2012/01/costa-rica-authorities-cannot-ascertain.html
By: La Nación (Costa Rica)
Date: 2012-01-09
Costa Rica: Authorities Cannot Ascertain Source of Midnight "Explosion"
Costa Rica: Authorities Cannot Ascertain Source of Midnight “Explosion”
Source: La Nación (Costa Rica)
Date: 09 January 2012
www.nacion.com/sucesos
San José (Hilda Miranda – Newsroom). The loud noise resembling that of an explosion was heard by dozens of people around midnight yesterday hitherto lacks any explanation by officialdom.
Neither the National Meteorological Institute (IMN) nor the OVISCORI (Costa Rican Vulcanology Observatory) have any records of a phenomenon that could have been responsible for the loud reverberations.
According to hundreds on the social networks, a powerful report -- lasting more than five minutes – was heard around midnight yesterday.
Reports from readers of La Nación on Facebook suggest that the reverberations were heard in parts of San José and in more remote communities such as Turrialba, San Ramon, Coronado, Heredia, Escazú and others.
According to the IMN, the atmosphere’s behavior in recent hours was normal. “Experts checked the satellite signal and no record of any anomalous situation was found,” stated Mario Sánchez, the agency’s press officer.
Similarly, the Observatorio Vulcanologico y Sismológico de Costa Rica (OVSICORI) informed that there was no record of any strong tremor that could have given rise to the loud buzzing.
Another version that made the rounds held that the explosions were from festivities in the town of Zapote, but the parties in charge of the celebrations dismissed this conjecture.
“The fireworks were normal. We are aware of that noise, but we don’t believe that it has anything to do with the festivities at Zapote, because people heard it in places far from [the community],” said Rafael Arias, an advisor to the San José city hall.
Arias further noted that the closing cannonade was at approximately 9 p.m., but that unauthorized parties discharged a series of “bomblets” around 12 a.m. “But it wasn’t a loud sound either,” he noted.
Some readers also stated that lights in the sky accompanied the loud noise.
(Translation (c) 2012, Scott Corrales, IHU. Special thanks to Alex Astua)
The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.
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