SOMETHING BIG IS SHIFTING!⚠️M6 hits AUSTRALIA after 3 violent quakes ! NEW ZEALAND next?
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magnitude 6.0 in Australia. Is this
coming from the three magnitude 7 plus
7.6 7.3 earthquakes that just happened?
And does New Zealand have to worry about
this? Because they're on the same plate
boundary. So massive earthquakes just
hit Vanuatu, Tonga, Indonesia, now in
the middle of Australia. So could this
affect New Zealand? The answer is not
what you think, guys. Because yes, they
are connected, but not in the way most
people believe. So, let me show you why
this is more complicated than it looks.
You need to know that something crazy
just happened in Australia. Yeah, right
in the middle if you look at it. not
completely in the middle but that is
really really strange and it really
shouldn't be happening like this. So we
have seen I have reported about three
magnitude 7 plus earthquakes that were
happening somewhat nearby if you look at
the map. So, is this related? Because a
magnitude 6 earthquake just struck in
the northern territory of Australia like
deep in the middle of the continent
nowhere near a plate boundary. So why
where is this coming from and that it is
not near a plate boundary. This is
exactly um why this matters because
Australia is supposed to be one of the
most stable pieces of crust on earth.
And then you know this is not like a 1.5
or something like this like 6.0
even if they downgrade it to 5
something. This is remarkable. So let's
break this down. In the middle of
nowhere, Australia sits on the
Indo-Australian plate. But here's what
most people don't realize. I have to
say, um, this plate is under massive
stress. But usually we see this along
the plate boundaries, Pacific Ring of
Fire, where you see where that located
where that where Australia is located,
right? That's why we've seen trouble in
Tonga, Vanoatu, and Indonesia. and very
very strong trouble there right now. So
what is happening? But before I tell you
that, please guys, can you give this
video an early like and hype? It doesn't
cost you anything. It helps my channel.
Thank you so much. Let's look into this
now. So the Indo-Australian plate is
under a lot of stress. We cannot ignore
that massive stress because it's pushed
from the north where it's colliding with
Southeast Asia and it's being pulled and
twisted along its boundaries with the
Pacific plate, Pacific Ring of Fire. And
that stress just doesn't stay on the
edges. It travels thousands of miles
straight through the interior of the
plate. Now, Central Australia is also
full of ancient fault systems. So, we're
talking about faults that formed um
hundreds of millions of years ago from
old mountain building events like the
Ellis Springs origin for example. So,
these faults are basically we call them
like sleeping cracks in the earth's
crust. So, they're locked, they're
compressed and but they're never fully
gone. So they're never fully gone until
stress builds up enough and then they
suddenly reactivate. So that's what
what's likely what this is what we're
seeing here in Australia. It's basically
we call this an intraplate rupture. It's
along one of these buried fault systems,
possibly linked to structures that are
in this area where the epicenter is, the
Red Bank thrust zone faults within the
Amadeos basin. Amados basin sounds
really, really nice. But here's what
makes this even more important in my
opinion. Earthquakes and stable
continental crust tend to travel much
farther. So because the rock is older,
it's colder, it's more rigid. So the
seismic waves don't lose the energy
quickly. So that means shaking from this
event that we've just seen could have
been felt hundreds of miles away. And we
also have to talk about the depth of
this earthquake because that matters
regarding how much it is felt. So the
early data suggests that it wasn't
extremely shallow. So likely somewhere
in the 10 to 30 kilometer range, like
roughly something like 7 to 23 miles
sort of thing. It's still considered
shallow, but it wasn't like 3 miles, 5
miles, right? It's deep enough to spread
energy wide, but it's still shallow
enough to be strongly felt near the
source. So near the source, we have to
talk population and infrastructure. So
thankfully this is one of the most
remote parts of Australia. The closest
reference point as you see on the map is
Ellis Springs. Beyond that sparse
communities like desert terrain. So
major damage is very unlikely. But that
doesn't mean this is insignificant. We
have to make that very very clear
because the real question is why now?
Why now? And if you've seen my previous
videos about these three magnitude 7
earthquakes, you might already hinting
at so especially why now with everything
else happening around the Indo-Pacific
region and the Indonesia earthquake that
we just had has already aftershocks 400
plus aftershocks. It's absolutely crazy.
So multiple magnitude 7 plus earthquakes
in places Tonga, Vanoatu, Indonesia, a
lot of aftershocks also in the magnitude
6 range. So all along the Pacific Ring
of Fire, right? That doesn't surprise
us. So now technically
those earthquakes are subduction zone
earthquakes, right? Completely different
mechanism. Those happen where the plates
are being subducted underneath each
other. one plate is diving underneath
the other one. So, but this one here
where we have that earthquake, that is
not the case. So, subduction is not a
direct trigger. But here's where it gets
interesting. The Indian Australian or
IndoAustralian plate is not acting as
one solid plate anymore. There is strong
scientific evidence that it's actually
fragmenting.
So fragmenting if it does that that
changes the narrative and that's very
very interesting. If it's breaking into
smaller blocks the Indian plate the
Australian plate and a diffuse
deformation zone in between
this means stress is no longer
distributed evenly. it's building up
internally and central Australia sits
right in that region in a region where
that stress can accumulate over time. So
while this earthquake is not directly
caused by the Tonga Vanuatu or Indonesia
earthquake, they're all part of a larger
tectonic system that is currently very
active. And if we have a big earthquake
magnitude 7 plus, seismic waves travel.
And if we have a fault system or an old
crack that is already
like locked and loaded or has built up
stress, a seismic wave coming from a
magnitude 7 could be the last trigger to
trigger that as well. Right? I want to
say that when we start seeing large
subduction earthquakes and unusual
intraplate earthquakes like this one
within the same broader plate system,
that's when you have to pay attention
because it suggests that the entire
region is under elevated stress. We have
to look at New Zealand
for a second. So, can that stress
trigger some of the dangerous faults in
New Zealand? New Zealand has a lot of
earthquakes.
Short answer, no. Not in I any direct
way or immediate way, but I don't
dismiss it completely either because
there is a deeper connection um that
definitely exists and that we cannot
ignore. So New Zealand sits right on the
boundary between the Indo-Australian
plate and the Pacific plate. So this is
major active plate boundary not a stable
interior like Australia. We have the
Alpine fault massive massive strike slip
fault on the South Island. We have the
Hikurangi subduction zone. Pacific plate
is diving under New Zealand the North
Island. So this area is already highly
stressed constant moving regularary
producing large earthquake. Tonga
Kamadec trench is there that's basically
if you look at the map directly north of
New Zealand Vanuatu further west but