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nine orcas killed by seaquake

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On Tuesday, 11 February 2014, nine orcas (killer) whales swam into the rocky shore inside Te Waewae Bay, South Island New Zealand In my opinion, formed after 50 years of trying to understand mass beachings, the biosonar system these orcas use to echonavigate was disabled by sinus barotrauma induced by disturbances in the surrounding water pressure generated above the epicenter of an extremely shallow earthquake off the west coast of South Island. The quake occurred at  8:54 pm local time on January 28th, 2014. The European-Mediterranean Seismology Group listed this event at 4.7 magnitude , focused only 2 kilometers below the ocean's surface . Other seismic stations reported this quake at 5+ mag. New Zealand GeoNet reported it as a strong earthquake at 5.4 magnitude; however, they listed the depth at 33 km, which is the standard default depth used by GeoNet for submarine earthquakes. As you can see at the bottom of GeoNet's page, most reporting stations indicated a depth

CAPE COD MAY SEE MASS WHALE BEACHINGS BETWEEN 17th - 24th FEBRUARY 2014

The following warning was issued on January 30, 2014: On January 28, 2014, the following series of pod-dangerous earthquakes occurred along the Reykjanes Ridge, a known habitat South of Iceland for pods of long-finned pilot whales and for other dolphin species. If a pod of whales or dolphins were injured by this series of seaquakes, they should beach themselves somewhere downstream of this area between the 17th and 24th of February 2014. Since the injury knocks out their sense of direction, where the lost/injured pod might beach depends solely of the flow of the surface currents. 2014-01-28    23:17:41.0 56.64 N   34.29 W   10 5.0   REYKJANES RIDGE 2014-01-28    22:22:16.0 56.82 N   34.47 W 0 1 5.3   REYKJANES RIDGE 2014-01-28    22:10:48.0 56.77 N   34.40 W   10 4.8   REYKJANES RIDGE 2014-01-28    21:33:33.0 56.82 N   34.39 W   10 4.6   REYKJANES RIDGE 2014-01-28    21:11:32.0 56.91 N   34.35 W   15 4.5   REYKJANES RIDGE 2014-01-28