I wanted to independently verify that this figure was accurate.
What I discovered was extremely alarming.
- 1 quake above magnitude 8
- 4 quakes between magnitude 7 and 8
- 33 quakes between magnitude 6 and 7
- 456 quakes between magnitude 5 and 6
- 1,809 quakes between magnitude 4 and 5
- 5,617 quakes between magnitude 3 and 4
- 10,512 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
- 33,959 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don’t feel.
If these numbers are accurate, things are even worse than the claims that are being made on social media.
Nearly 500 earthquakes of at least magnitude 5.0 in a 30 day period is extremely unusual.
I asked Google AI about what is going on, and this is what I was told…
According to the United States Geological Survey (USGS), the Earth experiences an average of 1,300 to 1,500 magnitude 5+ earthquakes annually. This translates to approximately 110-125 earthquakes of that magnitude per month.
Therefore, while the reported 396 magnitude 5+ earthquakes in the last 30 days is significantly higher than the average, it is important to note that global earthquake activity tends to cluster, meaning there can be periods of higher activity followed by calmer periods, still within the realm of normal geophysical variation.
Hopefully things will start to calm down in the days ahead.
But for now, large earthquakes continue to hit diverse locations all over the globe.
For example, the Dominican Republic was just hammered by a magnitude 5.7 earthquake…
A 5.7 magnitude earthquake struck off the southeast coast of the Dominican Republic early Tuesday, jolting residents awake in the Caribbean country and in neighboring Puerto Rico.
The quake occurred 24 miles (38 kilometers) southeast of Boca de Yuma at a depth of 104 miles (168 kilometers), according to the U.S. Geological Survey. No damage was reported.
Meanwhile, the “Year of the Fire” just continues to intensify.
“The Year of the Fire” began in southern California in January, and now another giant fire in the region is “out of control”…
BREAKING: SANTA BARBARA IS BURNING TO THE GROUND – AND IT STARTED ON FEDERAL LAND
The Gifford Fire has already exploded to 50,000+ acres, forcing mass evacuations in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo.
Flames are out of control. Smoke is choking the sky from California all the way to Las Vegas.
Over 1,000 boots on the ground and barely any containment.
Over 1,000 firefighters continue to battle a wildfire in California that has burned over 72,000 acres, prompted evacuation orders and caused three injuries, according to officials.
The Gifford Fire, which began on Friday afternoon, is situated within the Los Padres National Forest in Solvang, California, impacting those within Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, officials said. As of Monday, the fire has engulfed 72,460 acres and is only 3% contained, according to Cal Fire
If the Gifford Fire reaches 100,000 acres, it will be considered to be a “megafire”.
Of course the fire that has been raging in Grand Canyon National Park for a month is already considered to be a “megafire”, and it just keeps getting even larger…
A New Jersey hiker has been missing for more than a week in Arizona’s Grand Canyon National Park where a raging “mega-fire” has exploded to more than 123,000 acres.
Thomas Daniel Gibbs, 35, last spoke with friends and family around noon on July 22 and was officially reported missing six days later — the same day his Tesla Cybertruck was discovered abandoned at a parking lot at popular vista Grandview Point, according to the National Park Service.
The Freehold native was believed to have embarked on a hike on the arduous Grandview Trail and Horseshore Mesa the day he was last heard from.
Despite all of our advanced technology, wildfires are raging out of control all over North America.
And the month of August is just beginning.
There is one last thing that I wanted to mention today.
Weather patterns in much of Europe have also gone nuts, and it is being projected that we could see crop losses of up to 85 percent in some parts of Turkey this year…
In 2025, we have been hit by one major disaster after another.
It is almost as if we are living in a disaster movie that never ends.
And the truth is that what is ahead of us will make what we have gone through already look like a Sunday picnic.
The giant space rock that we all live on is being shaken in so many different ways.
Most of the population is not alarmed by what we are witnessing yet, but they should be.
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