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Mysterious Booms and Trembles Plague Wisconsin Town, Baffle Scientists
Police, residents and experts are baffled by the source of mysterious
booms and shaking that have been plaguing the town of Clintonville,
Wis., for the past three days, and have caused some residents to flee.
The Clintonville Police Department said they have received over 250
calls about noises from underground shaking homes in the northeast
corner of the town near Green Bay, Wis. with approximately 5000
residents.
The mystery is even stumping some of the brightest minds at the
University of Wisconsin, who were consulted about whether or not these booms could be related to seismic activity.
"I think we can rule out that standard earthquake activity, [that] some
swarm of earthquakes is happening in that region. It also really looks
like it's not connected to, say, unusual drilling activity or some other
kind of real obvious human induced signal, " Harold Tobin, one of those
professors in the Geoscience department at the University of Wisconsin
told WKOW.
Tobin headed to Clintonville after he received a call from the Wisconsin Geological Survey office asking for help.
Tobin and a colleague looked at activity on several of the seismometers
that sit in the region near Clintonville. He says there is an indication
that it is an especially noisy site, but not noisy enough to cause the
sounds people there are describing.
http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/mys...-news.html
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pla...MMVcMojLJg
Uploaded by Sheilaaliens on Mar 21, 2012
Here is a map of the three locations in Wisconsin experiencing strangeness right now. Clintonville and Montello with the rumbles and shaking. Fond Du Lac with the strange substance in the sewers. g.co/maps/nztss
"Tonight, police in Montello are investigating reports of booming sounds similar to what's been reported in Clintonville this week.
Many of the people making the reports say they hadn't even heard about what was going on in Clintonville until they began researching their own problem.
Patti Lekas said, "No one had an explanation."
In Montello, it's the talk of the town.
Lekas said, "There was a loud boom and all the windows shook. The whole house shook."
A loud rumble around 5-thirty last night immediately triggered calls to the police department.
Montello Police Chief Richard Olson said, "We have a lot of good, reliable sources that reported this pretty much community wide."
Jean Dawidziak's son heard the boom.
She says, "He was out at the farm and said mom there was this big thing, the whole house shook."
Pretty much everyone we talked to in Montello says they either heard and felt this rumble themselves or they know someone who did. One person even described it like a really bad train wreck, all the cars slamming into each other at once, right where you're standing.
Olson says, "They reported it almost as if it was under ground or ground level."
The police chief is still trying to make sense of it.
Olson says, "We are currently investigating it. We don't have an answer at this point. We've obviously checked with our typical sources such as utility companies and anybody maybe drilling or doing construction in the area and at this point in time we don't' know what it is."
Lekas says, "It would be like in the old days when you had a sonic boom and your windows rattled, but I mean it shook the entire house."
For the last three days the Clintonville community has reported similar booms.
Now 80 miles away in Montello they're worried they might have the same problem.
Lekas says, "It's not just my imagination or a couple crazy people in town. I mean, I was thinking it was an explosion but we had no flames anywhere."
But If it's anything like Clintonville it may be awhile until these people get any answers.
With a chuckle, Dawidziak said, "I would like to know what it is so it's not something underground that's going to blow up and this whole city is going to be gone or something. I would like to know. "
Today University of Wisconsin-Madison seismologist Harold Tobin said at this point he is not aware of any seismic readings or reports of the boom near Montello."
www.nbc15.com/news/headlines/Mysterious_Sound_And_Rumble_In_Montello_1...
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Interesting, dont know why my yahoo vid did not show.
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I don't think this software can display Yahoo videos.
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The experts have a pretty good cover story now. I forgot where I read it but if I come across it again I'll post the link. They said Wisconsin experienced a minor earthquakes. The quakes are so small that they don't register on any meters. Normally quakes that small no one feels them but because of the bedrock Wisconsin is on they feel it. I don't believe that story but it sounds good enough that most people will buy it.
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Associated Press
6:53 a.m. CDT, March 23, 2012
A minor earthquake occurred this week near the eastern Wisconsin city where researchers have been investigating a series of unexplained booming sounds, federal geologists said Thursday.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the 1.5-magnitude earthquake struck Tuesday just after midnight in Clintonville, a town of about 4,600 people about 40 miles west of Green Bay.
Geophysicist Paul Caruso told The Associated Press that loud booming noises have been known to accompany earthquakes. It's possible the mysterious sounds that town officials have been investigating are linked to the quake, he said.
Earthquakes can generate seismic energy that moves through rock at thousands of miles per hour, producing a sonic boom when the waves come to the surface, Caruso said.
"To be honest, I'm skeptical that there'd be a sound report associated with such a small earthquake, but it's possible," he said.
Those reservations didn't stop Clintonville City Administrator Lisa Kuss from declaring "the mystery is solved" at a news conference Thursday evening.
She said USGS representatives described the event as a swarm of several small earthquakes in a very short time.
"In other places in the United States, a 1.5 earthquake would not be felt," she said. "But the type of rock Wisconsin has transmits seismic energy very well."
The U.S. Geological Survey says earthquakes with magnitude of 2.0 or less aren't commonly felt by people and are generally recorded only on local seismographs. Caruso said the Tuesday earthquake was discovered after people reported feeling something, and geologists pored through their data to determine that an earthquake did indeed strike.
Local residents have reported late-night disturbances since Sunday, including a shaking ground and loud booms that sound like thunder or fireworks.
City officials investigated and ruled out a number of human-related explanations, such as construction, traffic, military exercises and underground work.
Clintonville resident Jordan Pfeiler, 21, said she doubted an earthquake caused the noises. She said the booms she experienced were in a series over the course of several hours and not continuous as she might have expected if they were caused by an earthquake.
Still, she said, "It's a little scary knowing Clintonville could even have earthquakes."
Steve Dutch, a geologist at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, said a 1.5 magnitude earthquake produces the energy equivalent of 100 pounds of explosives and could produce loud sounds.
But he was reluctant to describe Tuesday's event as an earthquake, saying the term is generally used to refer to widespread stress in the earth's crust. What happened in Wisconsin could be near the surface, perhaps caused by groundwater movement or thermal expansion of underground pipes, he said.
Still, Dutch said it was possible that the event could produce a series of sounds over time.
"If you've got something causing a little bit of shifting underground, it may take a while for whatever is causing it to play itself out," he said
Caruso, the U.S. Geological Survey scientist, said Tuesday's event was confirmed as an earthquake because it registered on six different seismometers, including some as far as central Iowa.
Jolene Van Beek, 41, had been jarred awake several times by late-night rumbling this week. When asked by telephone Thursday whether she thought the noises were caused by an earthquake, she joked that she was at a nearby lake "waiting for the tsunami to hit."
"Anything to do with earthquakes is going to freak people out," she said. "You'd never expect it in Wisconsin."
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local...6076.story
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