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HashingZap ✝️
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HashingZap ✝️ retweeté

Ben says my physics is wrong for his simulation. He's probably correct, since I'm using ECDO mechanisms within the mantle and his theory doesn't involve ECDO at all. I am also unable to add his modeling due to much of it being super theoretical and not well-understood.
However, the rotation here is correct.
x.com/HashZappa/stat…
HashingZap ✝️@HashZappa
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@HashZappa @EthicalSkeptic Where's the equator in a 72 degree tilt?
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Max water heights during @EthicalSkeptic's ECDO State 1 > State 2 transition. As close as I could get given all the motion involved, anyway.
One thing stands out vs. Ben Davidson's model. A 104° tilt is quite a bit more catastrophic than a 72° tilt. Absolute carnage is ECDO... 😳




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This sim project is wearing me down. I'm going to get the ECDO models out, and then publish the simulation calculation data for community feedback... might be good to get some outside opinions here.
Going to take a few nights off from there. I feel like all I think about lately is what might be missing or needs further review etc etc. After 4 months of it, I'm tired. 😂
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Yeah, I thought the same about why oceans were not moving as I expected. Under a rapid TPW event solid crust cannot reorient quickly, so the ocean must fill the gap of a misaligned solid earth. They don't flood from their own momentum, but rather it floods chasing a reoriented potential the slow forming crust hasn't caught up to yet.
I'll be publishing all of the stuff this simulation tool does in the coming days. It certainly goes against what you'd think would happen because there are just so many dynamics at play. I'm at the point where getting feedback and insight from others is going to help me chase down any missed or forgotten pieces of this puzzle.
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@HashZappa @EthicalSkeptic But how would that movement affect the oceans of fluid magma in the mantle? They're not as viscous, but much more dense so I'd imagine greater inertia pulling them away from axis. Where would the weak spots on the crust be where the mantle pushes through during this event?
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HashingZap ✝️ retweeté

1. A dramatic single month increase in global oceanic temperature, followed by air temps, followed by CO2
2. A shudder in the Earth's Chandler-style wobble
3. Acceleration of the geomagentic north pole into Russia towards the Bay of Bengal
4. Widening of the South Atlantic Anomaly and drop in the overall geomagnetic field strength
5. Schumann Resonance chaos
6. Significant uptick in larger earthquakes and volcanic activity.
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@mrckjmsbtch @sunfellow @EthicalSkeptic Yeah, the further away from the rilt angle the worse it gets. North America is in a tough spot for ECDO.
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@HashZappa @sunfellow @EthicalSkeptic Water heights aside, how fast would the crust actually move when decoupled? Where i'm at in WA state, its about 710mph. Pretty sure squishies aren't going to survive a 710mph shift.
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@weatherwarsinfo I dont think I will advance to that point. I have just enough power to run these locally overnight. So not too bad tbh. Worked a lot on optimizing load too.
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@HashZappa I’m curious about the hardware you are running these models on, can the compute load be shared with others?
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@Iwo1945 No, I agree. I am quite fascinated with the idea of the Hudson Bay region being a north pole region during the last ice age. I wish to explore that more at some point.
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@HashZappa he landed at an upper constraint of about 40 degrees. I think 30 degrees is the maximum, mostly inferred by looking at the physics of Earth's angular momentum. Of course, I could be wrong, but I still love the discussions happening. Just my two cents.
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@Iwo1945 I do have interest in Hapgood and a less severe model. Hoping to do more with that once I am done with this software program.
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@HashZappa I think the overall severity is limited... Earth does not perform like a free-floating body so I don't think a full Dzhanibekov Effect will be a reality...I do think that the outer body can shift but is more constrained...I am even more conservative than Hapgood (2)
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6.7/6.9 struck central Indonesia. If this isn't related to the 7.8 that struck South philippines, then seismology be damned. Everything is connected, and the "professionals" are clowns. We should have earthquake forecasting down by now, it is only a matter of who is controlling the data, agencies, and broader academic knowledge.

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@SeedOilDsrspctr Agreed. Now I am a grandpa in my 40s. Life is good.
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@jeremyfolco We just don't want to be around for the return trip. None of us will be around for that one anyway, though. 😅
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@HashZappa L'Afrique, la Turquie, la Grèce, l'Arabie Saoudite s'en sortent super bien dans cette simulation ! 👌
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Ordered a copy of Inversion tonight. Signed... sorry, I know you have a lot of those. 😂
Ethical Skeptic ☀@EthicalSkeptic
All the megalith/climate/cultural tradition pundits keep talking around its constructs lately, suggesting they are indeed the case, but refusing to mention the name of the theory itself. ECDO Theory But you already knew it - long ago. 😉 theethicalskeptic.com/2026/03/25/inv…
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@OldDude8e @ashiiirg @EthicalSkeptic That's exactly what drew me towards ECDO theory. Actually, it was this exact image. Oil, coal, natural gas reserves.... sure looks like an organic pile up of biblical proportions.
ECDO State 2 > State 1 slams into the Rockies on the eastern slopes too.

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@HashZappa @ashiiirg @EthicalSkeptic What are the chances that all the coal seams west side of Appalachia are boggy deposits from an event like this? Thanks for doing this work btw. It’s amazing
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@HashZappa Gotta do a filter for Zillow! Feet below new sea 🌊 level after the event 😂
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@GuitoShow @EthicalSkeptic I am delayed on getting this out. Check back tomorrow. I am working on exporting the data and publishing it. :)
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@MThompson372 Yeah, it seems like eruptive activity spikes around these geomagnetic events. Yellowstone's last "minor" eruption was during the Mono Lake Excursion. Crater of the Moons popped off during the Gothenburg event.
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@HashZappa Your crustal flexing math had me thinking that nowhere near a volcano, let alone Yellowstone, would be safe
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And I'm over here worrying about water. 😆
Massimo@Rainmaker1973
In structural geology, a fold is a stack of originally planar surfaces, such as sedimentary strata, that have been bent or curved during a permanent deformation. The lower Ugab River valley of Namibia is an impressive example of such a process.
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@MThompson372 @EthicalSkeptic Yeah, but I'm trying a few other models before I publish final results.
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@HashZappa @EthicalSkeptic This includes the new crustal flex calculation?
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