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December 10, 2012 – ARIZONA – Jean
Swesey was doing homework with her son in Cottonwood when it happened.
“It was a whole series of booms,” Swesey said. “Up to six or seven. It
was fast, it went loud. We were quiet and then my daughter down the hall
screams really loud, ‘Did you hear that?’ I sat there for a second and I
heard another set.” Swesey wasn’t alone. Residents in communities in
and around Verde Valley and as far as Flagstaff called 911 or their
police and fire departments to report the strange booming sounds. “It
sounded like thunder, but underground,” Swesey said. “Like muffled
thunder. And all the dogs in the neighborhood, all of them that were
outside all started barking at once.” CBS 5 News first received reports
of the explosion-like noises shortly after 5 p.m. Tuesday and began
checking with law enforcement and government sources. The U.S.
Geological Survey reports no significant earthquake activity in Arizona
that could have created the booms. The Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office
had deputies in the area that either heard it or tried to respond to
resident calls. They found nothing. The Sedona Fire District dispatched a
crew to check a report of a strange odor, but that was unfounded and
may not be related to the sounds. The Camp Verde Marshal also received a
number of phone calls about the booms. Officers found no evidence of
any explosions. But the Verde Valley contains large expanses of
uninhabited land. “Maybe when the light comes back they’ll find
something,” said Gary Johnson of Sedona Fire. Swesey sure hopes so. “It
was just, ‘boom-boom-boom-boom-boom all over the Verde Valley.” The
cause of the mystery noise still remains a mystery. –KPHO
December 3, Rhode Island shaken: Did
you hear it? On Monday night at approximately 11:20 p.m., reports of a
loud boom flooded police stations and social media sites alike. Sources
from the Warwick Police Department said they received nearly 100 phone
calls reporting a loud noise that some thought was an explosion. Some
residents called to say it shook their homes. On the other side of
Narragansett Bay in Barrington, residents also reported the noise, and a
few said a flash of light accompanied it. The calls prompted an initial
police and fire search of the areas, and then marine crews took to the
waters between Conimicut and Bullocks Point to search for the source of
the sound. Senior Chief Jamey Kinney, from the southeast sector of the
Unite States Coast Guard, said one of their boats from Castle Hill
joined four other local boats to comb Narragansett. Initially, the Coast
Guard made calls to T.F. Green to see if they had any missing planes,
but the FAA confirmed all was status quo. They also reached out to
National Grid to see if any transformers had exploded, but they, too,
confirmed all was well. The Coast Guard then tossed around the idea that
the noise could have been a vessel in distress, but Kinney said their
foray into the waters was more as a precautionary measure. “It’s better
to respond earlier,” said Kinney. But there was no vessel, and after
combing the waters for an hour and 50 minutes the Coast Guard returned
their team to shore empty-handed. To add to the mystery, residents
further reported a low, droning, humming noise coming from the water
that began about an hour or so after the initial boom was heard, about
the same time crews took to the water to comb for a source.. But Kinney
said the source of the hum is just as mysterious as whatever caused the
initial boom. However, the Coast Guard did determine that the strange
flashing light reported in Barrington came from a lighthouse. Locally,
reports of the boom came from local neighborhoods like Buttonwoods,
Hoxsie, Conimicut, Lakewood, Edgewood, Warwick Neck, Gaspee and Governor
Francis Farms. Other media outlets have reported that the noise was
heard as far away as Somerset, Mass. Yet, there were still some
residents of those communities that missed the boom altogether. Though
Kinney said, “strange stuff happens all the time,” he has never heard of
mysterious boom like this in this area. Still, according to some
reports, this isn’t the first time Rhode Island has dealt with such a
mystery. Another loud noise reverberated through the Narragansett Bay
area in August 1998 around 9:30 p.m. Yet again, officials could not find
the source. Rhode Island isn’t the only place that’s been mystified by
such inexplicable noises, since they’re fairly common throughout other
areas of the country. In March, residents of Clintonville, a town in
Wisconsin, reported a series of mysteries booms night after night.
Residents said they were consistently being awoken from their sleep by
the sounds. Still, officials had a tricky time pinpointing the source.
Finally, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) recorded a 1.5 magnitude
earthquake and said the noises were consistent with the ground’s
trembling. ABC, who was among several national news stations to document
Clintonville’s strange plight, concluded that the mystery was solved by
the USGS diagnosis. The USGS website did not indicate any seismic
activity in New England at the time of Monday night’s boom, though there
was a small earthquake in Maine on Tuesday morning, well after reports
of the noise. –Warwick online
Article Source: theextinctionprotocol
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