Thread 16730635 - /sci/

Anonymous
7/22/2025, 12:14:27 AM No.16730635
Screenshot_20250722_001357_Gallery
Screenshot_20250722_001357_Gallery
md5: 5cacee382cc14f74ea656eac5967fae1🔍
At location ~(0,0) in the Gulf of Guinea, there are monochromatic seismic waves at 26-second period intervall, seemingly continuously since it was identified in the 1960s.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-023-00837-y


What is going on there?
Replies: >>16730865 >>16731071 >>16731123
Anonymous
7/22/2025, 12:47:21 AM No.16730646
super spoopy
Q
7/22/2025, 10:35:42 AM No.16730865
>>16730635 (OP)
Probably a spot where extreme waves impact land mass.
Replies: >>16730955
Anonymous
7/22/2025, 12:50:10 PM No.16730955
>>16730865
Every 26 seconds vor 60+ years?
I stuggle to Image any type of phenomen that could be explaining this. It must be some kind of ressonance
Replies: >>16732356
Anonymous
7/22/2025, 3:11:23 PM No.16731004
The equator is geographically significant but the prime meridian is geologically arbitrary.
Anonymous
7/22/2025, 4:41:21 PM No.16731071
>>16730635 (OP)
could be a nuclear reactor, like Oklo
water seeps in, when it inundates enough of the uranium it gets vaporized
rinse, repeat
Anonymous
7/22/2025, 5:52:02 PM No.16731123
>>16730635 (OP)
The micro black hole that slammed into Tunguska has been slowly making its way through the planet. This is it reaching the surface. The reason for the precise period is because it's a Kerr black hole.
Anonymous
7/24/2025, 2:26:57 AM No.16732356
>>16730955
>no it's not that
lol
>it must be
Opinion discarded, concession accepted