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dutchsinse: How to forecast an earthquake
Premiered Oct 23, 2023 
-- TEXT VERSION -- 
Fundamental Principles
This has been made for anyone to test the method.
How to forecast an earthquake THE TEXT VERSION: By Dutchsinse (Michael Yuri Janitch)

Simply put, almost anyone can do earthquake forecasting down to a region of a few hundred miles, down to an approximate 7-10 day time period, and usually within 1 magnitude of what actually ends up striking.

HOW TO:
Standing wave principles apply.  See here for a video example: https://rumble.com/vbdn5d-concentic-standing-waves-standing-waves-solitons.html
Video above shows the whole process from deep earthquakes to the spread up, the halfway sorting and the spread out......... (video shows concentric waves , into a singularity spike upwards, then a standing wave in a tank building power reflecting back into itself.. then the middle points are sorted via vibration on a shake plate, then the wave travels as a soliton solitary wave of translation, then sorts to middle points again as it distributes out along the linear plate boundaries and across craton edges)

Explanation:
Between any two earthquakes, a middle point exists.  
Think of two earthquakes like two waves in a standing wave tank.  Then a new earthquake (a new single wave of same size or combined larger) pops up in the "middle point" between the two previous waves.
Like book ends, the two previous earthquakes define the area to watch for the NEW earthquake  to strike in the nearterm future.   The middle point usually is struck with the combined total of both previous earthquakes.

Example:
Two 5.0's hit across Japan.. (one M5.0 on the south at Kyushu, one M5.0 on the north at Hokkaido)..... then a few days later or less a new M5.1 to M5.2 strikes the middle point at Tokyo.
cont...
https://youtube.com/watch?v=WTONWLDIpQs