Monday, April 2, 2018

42 44 54 68 251 | Magnitude 6.8 earthquake strikes Bolivia; no reports of injuries, April 2, 2018


A powerful 6.8-magnitude earthquake struck Bolivia on Monday, but it was so deep that there were no reports of injuries or damage. The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake struck at 10:40 a.m. local time (9:40 a.m. EDT; 1340 GMT) and it was centered 205 miles, or127 kilometers, southeast of Tarija, Bolivia. The epicenter was 346 miles, or 557 kilometers, below the surface.

The San Calixto Observatory in La Paz said that it is one of the most powerful quakes on record in Bolivia, but that there was no damage because it was so deep.
 
251 is the 54th prime number

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake struck at 10:40 a.m. local time (9:40 a.m. EDT; 1340 GMT) and it was centered 205 miles, or 127 kilometers, southeast of Tarija, Bolivia.
127 is the 31st prime number

Today's date of this earthquake that struck Tarija, Bolivia happened on April 2, 2018, date written 4/2 or 2/4.
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)

If you spell out the magnitude earthquake, you get the following:
181 is the 42nd prime number
as scripted = 42. Building = 42. History = 42. Knowledge = 42. New Testament = 42. New World = 42


The quake caused people to evacuate office buildings that swayed as far away as Sao Paulo, Brazil, some 1,800 miles, or 3,000 kilometers, from Tarija.
 Date numerology: 4/2/2018 = 4+2+20+18 = 44
Argentina  = 44

337 is the 68th prime number

 La Paz, Bolivia sits on the 68th parallel. Coordinates: 16°30′S 68°09′W

A 6.8 magnitude earthquake struck Bolivia on Monday, April 2, 2018.

People are 'by tradition,' buried 6 feet deep, 8 feet long.
The Vesica Piscis = 68. Universal deceit = 68

"I felt a little dizzy. But then I looked at the window and the curtains were shaking," said lawyer Hugo Vecchiatto, who works on the 17th floor of an office building on Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo.
Paulista Avenue = 68

Only light tremors were felt in Bolivia's capital and other cities. But the quake caused people to evacuate office buildings that swayed as far away as Sao Paulo, Brazil, some 1,800 miles, or 3,000 kilometers, from Tarija.

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