Visitors Now:
Total Visits:
Total Stories:
Profile image
By Isis (Reporter)
Contributor profile | More stories
Story Views

Now:
Last Hour:
Last 24 Hours:
Total:

So Loud, So Sudden …. it makes your heart stop …. sounds from beyond the veil

Sunday, October 2, 2011 19:12
% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.

(Before It's News)

 

/mediadrop/uploads/2013/39/d47b37dfe4f857427b74a2455e34eb67938ca32f.jpg

When two worlds share the same space … separated by only by the frequency veil and the gravity of their established atomic velocity …



If a light is bright enough and a sound is loud enough … the effect can bleed through the veil of the established matrix reality ..



Mother Earth/core holds 3 additional levels of such an overlay of dimensional zones …



One hidden in the skies of our heavens … and the other hidden below the surface of our ground …



Now beyond the dimensional skies, are a whole other-set of overlaid levels, of dimensional zones …. these are contained within the very fiber of our associated heliosphere …

http://www.wbir.com/images/300/169/2/assetpool/images/110929064131_P-5%20LOUISVILLE%20BOOMS5.jpg

Ground-shaking booms puzzle Louisville neighborhood

HERE 10:17 AM, Sep 30, 2011

Louisville residents searching for the source of an unexplained ground-shaking boom can scratch another theory off the list.Original Story, Thursday, Sep. 29: 

Ground-shaking booms puzzle Louisville neighborhood

The Lashbrooke subdivision in Louisville enjoyed a quiet and sun-bathed afternoon on Thursday.  The peaceful surroundings of the affluent neighborhood along the Tennessee River lend no hint that its residents suffer from shell-shock.

"It's scary-loud. It's loud enough that it makes your heart stop for a second," said Andy Wombold.  "It sounds like a shotgun or an explosion of some kind."

Wombold and dozens of other residents in the neighborhood are unable to say exactly what "it" is.  All they know is the mysterious booms have provided several rude awakenings that sent residents scrambling in fear.

"Last Monday, about a week and a half ago, it was around 3 a.m. and it was, 'Pow!'  All the sudden we heard a loud explosion. It sounded like it came from inside our house. It shook the walls.  It shook the floor.  It shook the ceiling," said Wombold.

Wombold said he ran upstairs to check on his parents and ran into his father who was already headed downstairs.

"We thought maybe a gas line had exploded and maybe our house was going to blow up. We thought it was really serious," said Wombold.

"It was like lightning struck directly beside the house," said neighbor Dwayne Jones.  "I jumped out of bed and ran outside.  Then I saw a clear sky full of stars and knew it wasn't lightning.  The ground was still shaking for a little bit.  It was like a big sonic boom.  Just the whole house shakes.  I never heard anything like it."

Several residents called emergency dispatchers and Blount County deputies responded to the scene.   However, they were unable to find any problems in the neighborhood.  Marian O'Briant with the Blount County Sheriff's Office said deputies also checked with local rock quarries and confirmed there were no blasting operations.

Residents said the booms continued for several days.

"It would happen in the middle of the night, in the morning, at all different times," said Jones.  "It was like they would get a little weaker as the days went by, but it was still really jarring."

"You generally heard one big boom and then a bunch of aftershocks in quick succession.  I don't know if it was an echo off the river or what," said Wombold. 

A Tennessee National Guard spokesman confirmed there were no military operations in the area that would create the ground-shaking experience.

T-DOT told 10News there are no construction projects in the area that could explain the noise. 

The USGS said there has only been one earthquake in Tennessee in the last couple of weeks.  That tremor only registered 1.4 on the Richter magnitude scale and was in Tiptonville along the Mississippi River.

"The other thing we figured is it might have been something with the power lines," said Jones.  "We have these very large lines that go directly through the neighborhood and across the river, but we never had any power outages."

TVA confirmed there have been no problems with the lines near the Lashbrooke subdivision.

The mystery may be more difficult to solve as the frequency of the booms decreases.  Wombold said it has been a couple of days since he last heard a boom while Jones indicated he has not noticed the noise since late last week.  Blount County dispatchers said the last call they received about the booms was last week.

Whatever the cause, residents said the booms repeatedly sent an unforgettable and shocking experience through the neighborhood for most of the week.

"Be sure to lock your doors because who knows where that noise is coming from," joked Wombold.  "I just really want to know what caused it."

Pipeline "Pigging" Possibility?

A Loudon County resident provided another theory about the source of the explosive sounds.  Greg Potter from Lenoir City said he had a similar experience a few years ago.  

"One night we heard all kinds of booms.  It shook the house and the ground," said Potter.  "We called the police.  We eventually found out there was a pipeline that runs deep underground in our yard.  The pipeline company was doing what they called 'pigging' where they shoot something like nitrogen slugs between the product to clear the pipeline."

A Loudon County resident speculated on Thursday that the noise could have come from maintenance on an underground pipeline (see previous story below).  The Plantation Pipe Line Company operates a large liquid refined petroleum pipeline that runs from Knoxville to Macon, Georgia.  The pipeline is co-owned and operated by Kinder Morgan.

Update: Friday, 11:00 a.m.
Louisville mystery-booms unrelated to pipeline

Emily Mir with Kinder Morgan's media relations department contacted 10News on Friday morning and indicated there were no recent operations that would have created the noise.  Furthermore, the pipeline in question is located around 10 miles from the Lashbrooke subdivision.

 


 

Report abuse

Comments

Your Comments
Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

Top Stories
Recent Stories

Register

Newsletter

Email this story
Email this story

If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.