Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Geologists have sounded the alarm on mysterious underground heat rising along the East Coast in the direction of Delco.
Deep beneath New England, scientists have discovered a massive pocket of super heated rock slowly pushing its way upward through the Earth’s mantle, and it’s heading south. This isn’t your average rock formation… it’s hotter than anything around it, and it’s on the move. The underground force is creeping in our direction, inch by inch, like a lava lamp in slow motion.
The hottest zone is currently under Vermont, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts, but traces of the heat are already spreading toward New York and New Jersey. If it keeps moving south, it will be coming right for Delco. We could eventually find ourselves sitting above a geological hot seat.
Scientists claim there’s nothing to worry about… but then why have there been so many earthquakes happening near Delco in the last couple of weeks???

 

A giant underground “hot blob” is heading for New York City and Delco is next. Scientists have discovered a massive, mysterious mass of hot rock buried deep beneath New England and it’s slowly drifting straight toward New York City. The underground anomaly, which experts are calling the Northern Appalachian Anomaly, sits about 125 miles below the surface and is hotter than anything else in the surrounding mantle.
Here’s where it gets wild: this thing is on the move. It’s creeping southwest and it’s locked in like a geological freight train. First stop? New York City. Next stop? Delco. Yep. Delco is on this blob’s long term hit list.
Scientists aren’t exactly sure what’s powering it or where it came from. Some think it was formed when Greenland split off from North America millions of years ago, but what they do know is that it’s defying expectations. It’s unlike anything else geologists have seen in this region.
No wonder we keep having earthquakes. The Blob is on the move.

 







 San Francisco - Schroeder's German restaurant. 240 Front Street, established 1893.  

Photo taken in 2012
credit: nuvocoke