So this is strange and somewhat related to this. I don't know if you all have been reading anything about magnetic polar shift, but out of curiosity I decided to run a little experiment. I placed a compass on a desk, and aligned the red side of the needle of the compass to north "N" on the compass. It's been sitting there untouched for about a month. Now that same compass in the exact same spot I placed it, is now aligned at 270 degrees exactly west. So in one month it changed 90 degrees. Magnetic north is now West.
Any thoughts?
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... hypothesishttps://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... netic_Polehttp://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... -core.html"Earth's north magnetic pole is racing toward Russia at almost 40 miles (64 kilometers) a year due to magnetic changes in the planet's core, new research says."
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... c_reversal"A geomagnetic reversal is a change in the orientation of Earth's magnetic field such that the positions of magnetic north and magnetic south become interchanged. These events often involve an extended decline in field strength followed by a rapid recovery after the new orientation has been established. These events occur on a scale of tens of thousands of years or longer, with the latest one (the Brunhes–Matuyama reversal) occurring 780,000 years ago."
"Evidence of geomagnetic reversals can be seen at mid-ocean ridges where tectonic plates move apart and the seabed is filled in with magma. As the magma seeps out of the mantle the magnetic particles contained within it are oriented in the direction of the magnetic field at the time the magma cools and solidifies."
"Effects on biosphere and human society
Because the magnetic field has never been observed to reverse by humans with instrumentation, and the mechanism of field generation is not well understood, it is difficult to say what the characteristics of the magnetic field might be leading up to such a reversal.
Some speculate that a greatly diminished magnetic field during a reversal period will expose the surface of the Earth to a substantial and potentially damaging increase in cosmic radiation. However, Homo erectus and their ancestors certainly survived many previous reversals, though they did not depend on computer systems that could be damaged by large coronal mass ejections.[citation needed]
There is no uncontested evidence that a magnetic field reversal has ever caused any biological extinctions. A possible explanation is that the solar wind may induce a sufficient magnetic field in the Earth's ionosphere to shield the surface from energetic particles even in the absence of the Earth's normal magnetic field.[14] Another possible explanation is that magnetic field actually does not vanish completely, with many poles forming chaotically in different places during reversal, until it stabilizes again.[11][15]"
http://www.examiner.com/exopolitics-in- ... s-collapse"According to a December 16, 2008 report, NASA’s THEMIS spacecraft has discovered a hole in earth’s magnetic field which is 10 times as large as previously thought. The magnetosphere, which is designed to protect earth from the plasma of solar flares, now has a hole in it four time the size of the earth."