2011 Twelve Month Earthquake Forecast horoscope



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Old quake forecast makes some flee Rome


Published: May 11, 2011 at 2:22 PM
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ROME, May 11 (UPI) -- Many Italians fled Rome Wednesday to escape an earthquake predicted almost a century ago despite reassurances, authorities said.
In 1915, a self-described seismologist, Raffaele Bendandi, predicted a major quake would hit Rome on May 11, 2011. He is claimed to have predicted earthquakes in Italy before his death in 1979.
Facebook, Twitter and text messages helped spread the panic, ANSA reported.
"Rome is not at risk of any earthquake," said Enzo Boschi, head of the National Institute of Geophysics and Vulcanology. "There have never been any strong earthquakes confirmed under the city."
Mayor Gianni Alemanno said Romans would not be taken in, but businesses said a fifth of their employees asked for the day off, and some parents took their children out of school and left town for the day.
Many shops in the Chinatown and Piazza Vittorio sections were shut, with signs citing illness or inventory-taking.
Restaurateur Enrico Mordacchini said meat was hard to come by at his local butcher.
"The butcher told me he had hardly any meat left because his customers had been stocking up on meat and sausages for barbecues in the country," he said.


Read more: http://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2011/05/11/Old-quake-forecast-makes-some-flee-Rome/UPI-58341305138152/#ixzz1MwghpS8W

Rome Fears Devastating Earthquake Internet Forecast For May 11


Rome
Posted: 05/ 9/11 11:07 AM ET
ROME (Reuters) – If tourists find Rome unusually quiet next Wednesday, the reason will probably be that thousands of locals have left town in fear of a devastating earthquake allegedly forecast for that day by a long-dead seismologist.
For months Italian internet sites, blogs and social networks have been debating the work of Raffaele Bendandi, who claimed to have forecast numerous earthquakes and, according to internet rumors, predicted a "big one" in Rome on May 11.
The national television network RAI has run programs aimed at calming rising panic among Romans. The civil protection agency has issued statements reiterating the official scientific view that earthquakes can't be predicted.
Yet many residents of the Eternal City aren't listening.
"I'm going to tell the boss I've got a medical appointment and take the day off," barman Fabio Mengarelli told Reuters. "If I have to die I want to die with my wife and kids, and masses of people will do the same as me."
Chef Tania Cotorobai also said she would be taking a day off in the country. "I don't know if I really believe it but if you look at the internet you see everything and the opposite of everything, and it end up making you nervous," she said.
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Memories are still vivid of the 2009 earthquake in L'Aquila, which killed more than 300 people and was also felt in Rome.
On that occasion controversy also swirled around a scientist, Giampaolo Giuliani, who in the preceding days tried to warn the local population of an imminent quake -- though officials say he was wrong about its precise location.
Bendandi, who died in 1979 aged 86, believed earthquakes were the result of the combined movements of the planets, the moon and the sun and were perfectly predictable.
In 1923 he forecast a quake would hit the central Adriatic region of the Marches on January 2 the following year. He was wrong by two days but Italy's main newspaper Corriere della Sera still ran a front page article on "The man who forecasts earthquakes."
Bendandi's fame grew and in 1927 he was awarded a knighthood by Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. During his long career his theories were studied by several prominent foreign astronomers.
However the current panic appears to be due more to fear-mongering in the age of internet than to Bendandi himself.
Paola Lagorio, the president of an association dedicated to Bendandi and which preserves all his manuscripts, says they make no reference to any earthquake around Rome in 2011.
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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