The new
Finale Emilia crop picture of June 7, 2013 points directly toward
the epicentre of a devastating M6.1 earthquake which struck northern
Italy near Finale Emilia on May 20, 2012, one year earlier
Slightly
more than one year ago on May 20, 2012, a devastating M6.1
earthquake struck northern Italy, slightly north-northwest of the
town of Finale Emilia:

On the
night before that earthquake, a remarkable crop picture appeared 100
km southeast of the epicentre near Bracciano, Italy, and pointed in
its general direction (see
Bracciano2012a or “Modern crop pictures and earthquakes: new
evidence for a possible relation” on
Bracciano2012c).
Now a
new crop picture has appeared in northern Italy, close to the town
of Finale Emilia on June 7 or 8, 2013 (see
www.faenzashiatsu.it).
It seems only natural that we might inquire once again, about any
possible relation between the crop picture and the earthquake?
The
latitude and longitude of that new crop picture on June 7, 2013 were
44.8256o North, 11.2940o East, while the
latitude and longitude of that M6.1 earthquake on May 20, 2012 were
fairly similar as 44.91o North, 11.24o East.
Using aerial photographs taken by Gian Domenico Marchi plus Google
Earth, I was quickly able to establish that the new crop picture
points directly toward the epicentre of that powerful
M6.1 earthquake one year earlier.
A
high-resolution image of the crop picture shows which field it was
located in, just south of Finale Emilia, and how it points toward
the north-northwest:

A
low-resolution map shows how the crop picture points directly toward
the epicentre of that May 20, 2012 earthquake, about 10 km to the
north-northwest:

Although
further studies remain to be done, it seems likely now that both the
Bracciano crop picture of May 20, 2012 and the Finale Emilia crop
picture of June 7, 2013 were made in relation to a powerful
earthquake on May 20, 2012 which affected northern Italy. I have
noted elsewhere that such field images seem to be the “marks” left
by time travellers (see
fringe2013g). As a scientist living on Earth today, you really
must have no curiosity at all, and no inclination to explore new or
unexplained phenomena, not to take modern crop pictures seriously.
Red
Collie
(Dr. Horace R. Drew, Caltech 1976-81, MRC Laboratory of Molecular
Biology 1982-86, CSIRO Australia 1987-2010)