Solar eclipse reveals the incredible nature of synchronicity by predicting two historic earthquakes

 

                                                               Phase of the solar eclipse

On August 11, 1999, a solar eclipse occurred that would be the last of the 20th century and the second millennium, as there were only partial solar eclipses in the year 2000. Although it was a medium total eclipse, its path through highly populated regions has made it the most widely observed total solar eclipse in human history.

The penumbral area extended from North America to Central Asia. The path of totality was visible around 11:00 UTC in Terra Nova, Cornwall, Devon County, northern France, southern Belgium, Luxembourg, southern Germany, Austria, Hungary, northern Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, the Black Sea, Romania, Turkey, Iran, southern Pakistan, India, and the Bay of Bengal.

The point of maximum duration was in Romania, in Râmnicu Vâlcea (more precisely Ocnele Mari), where the Sun was covered by the Moon for 2 minutes and 27 seconds.

**Time between the eclipse and the Japan earthquake on March 11, 2011:**

11 years, 7 months, and 0 days  

4230 days

Numerology suggests an important sequence, 11.7, which symbolizes the date of the great California earthquake among other historic earthquake dates.

Let’s see how much time there is between the eclipse and July 11, 2025:

25 years, 11 months, and 0 days  

9466 days

Clearly, if we add 2 and 5, we get 7, thus creating the sequence 7.11, similar to the Japan earthquake.

The dates of these two major earthquakes are clearly aligned with the last eclipse of the 20th century.


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