11.23.2011

Piezoelectric Explosions in Bridegwater, New Jersey


Mystery in Bridgewater: What Caused Strange Glowing Lights in the Sky?

by Eugene Paik and Len Melisurgo for The Star-Ledger
November 23, 2011

It may have looked like an out-of-this-world blast, but authorities say a mysterious glow that lit up the early-morning sky in Bridgewater today was no cause for alarm.

Some county and Bridgewater officials believe that transformer fires caused by heavy rain may have played a part in the freakish light show, although they had no definitive answers about the source of the lights.

Shortly after midnight, several Bridgewater residents reported seeing a pulsating glow in the distance that changed colors, similar to the aurora borealis. They said the lights appeared to come from the northern part of the township.


"The sky lit up like pure daylight," said 87-year-old Joseph Wing, who lives on Foothill Road. "This was unlike anything I've ever seen."

Wing said he first wondered if an explosion was responsible, but he didn't hear a blast or feel an impact that matched the intensity of the lights. He said the glow disappeared around 12:30am It was followed by reports of power outages in the township.

A Bridgewater police official and a Jersey Central Power & Light spokesman could not be immediately reached for comment. But Township Council President Howard Norgalis said he was aware of several electricity-related fires around that time - most notably a sparking transformer near Milltown Road and Route 28.

Robert Bogart, township administrator, said there was also a transformer explosion on Route 202/206 and Heather Hill Way.

William Stahl, the county's 9-1-1 director, said he saw lights dimming and brightening on the horizon from his Warren Township home this morning. Based on Tuesday night's weather, the lights might have been caused by tree limbs falling on power lines, causing sparks and blown fuses, he said.

Early this morning, after the bright flashes of light began appearing in the Bridgewater sky, concerned residents and startled motorists called a live radio talk show on New Jersey 101.5-FM to report what they had seen.

Some callers reported what appeared to be a transformer explosion, with the sky lighting up in bright blue and green flashes that lasted more than a minute.

"I'm lying in bed when I hear this enormous rumbling sound," said one man who called the Ray Rossi show. When he looked outside his window, he saw blue and green lights in the sky, "like a flash of lightning that never stops."

A woman who called the radio station said she saw extremely bright blue flashes of light flickering in the sky and lighting up her neighborhood for about two minutes.

Reports of strange lights in the sky are nothing unusual for New Jersey. Among the most recent were mysterious lights in Morris County in 2009, though those were red lights that were later revealed to be helium balloons tied with car flares.




Analysis

As suggested by various reports concerning these atmospheric flashes above Bridgewater, this electrical overload event has been linked with power transformer fires, as previously witnessed in Fort Worth, Texas; Dublin, Ireland and Constantine, Michigan. The brilliant multi-colored displays witnessed above these locations during the power outage and subsequent explosions are flashes of atmospheric plasma that arch along the waveguides of infrasound standing waves that converge on those sites.

Spontaneous electronic glitches have been linked to measured surges in electrical ground currents generated by the magnetic shockwaves of solar flares. The most dramatic aerial displays witnessed arching high above power stations in Forth Worth and Bridgewater did not result in any reported deaths, whereas similar events in Pekanbaru, Indonesia followed a power blackout and caused mass seizures, killing 2 people.

This unusual event in Bridgewater is one of many such spontaneous recurring fires that are connected with anomalous electrical surges and piezoelectric fires that are now being caused all over the world by an unrecognized force: ultra-low frequency sound, far below the audible level of most humans.

This infrasonic influence is building strong electrical currents in the metal objects like wheel-barrows, door-knockers and copper electrical wiring in the walls of homes, which then become hot enough to ignite the plastic sheathing surrounding the wires. In other cases, heated wires ignite bed mattresses and metal hangers ignite clothing.

The infrasound which is now being focused onto the Bridgewater, New Jersey vicinity is being transduced by the Orion pyramids of present-day Giza, Egypt, which act as a nonlinear lensing system for resonantly balancing the geomagnetic fields of Earth as stimulated by coronal mass ejections from the increasing solar activity.

Bridgewater, New Jersey (40.62°N 74.60°W) is 5,646 miles from Giza, or 22.7% of the Earth's mean circumference (of 24,892 miles). Other related energetic events including exploding manhole covers and spontaneous fires in this region include Brentwood, Long Island and New York City.

The mathematical relationship of this Bridgewater event within the global pyramid network reveals the invisible quantum connections linking such anomalous events related to solar activity. This pattern of intense solar flares and the resulting infrasound fires at focal points around the planet will culminate in the intense auroral events of December 22, 2012.

Other widely reported examples of such extreme manifestations of this resonance are now simultaneously occurring in Tenerife, Freetown, Babura, Abuja, Bauchi, Jos, Omukondo, Onakaheke, Tsholotsho, Lalapansi, Goodhope, Nairobi, Mpumalanga, Mapuve, Bodibe, Bloemfontein, Hopewell, Cape Town, Tshiozwi, Landovica, Galway, Longford, Glasgow, Dublin, Crewe, Coventry, Hull, Waterford, London, Surrey, Steeple, Egham, Wisbech Peterborough, Messina, Peschici, Berici, across northern Greece, Ratria, Kakori, Mumbai, Kolkata, Charajpura, Thiruvananthapuram, Kishtwar, Gangyal, Rangrik, Kota Baru, Kuala Lumpur, Santo Tomas, New Norcia Darwin, Rockhampton, Adelaide, Brisbane, Eaglehawk, Sydney, Georgetown, La Pampa, Melipilla, Nelson, and in the US in Seattle, Corvallis, Soudan SP, Minneapolis, New Ulm, Pueblo, Waxahachie, Anderson, Bluffton, Georgetown, Homosassa, San Mateo, Vallejo, San Francisco, Clovis, Calaveras, Haverhill and Peabody.