"Certainly the Australian artesian basin will be affected by the Earth changes, and well before the tipping of the Indo-Australian Plate during the hour of the pole shift. We have mentioned that plates being raised will often bend at the point where they are rising up from ground level, and thus losing the support they used to enjoy. For Australia this breaking point occurs 1/3 of the way across the continent from the eastern shore. East of that point it is rising from the magma, and west of that point being pushed down into the magma so the plate can plunge under the Himalayas. Thus, the bending point is right in the middle of your artesian basin. This puts pressure on the water pool, so presumably it would tend to spurt out any tap"

ZetaTalk Chat Q&A for September 11, 2010"When the Indo-Australian Plate is tipped to the extent that the eastern part of the plate will be lifting above the magma supporting it, the bend will be along what is currently low land in Australian. As we have often stated this represents weak point in a land mass where the rock layers are thin. For Australia, this will be from the southernmost part of the Gulf of Carpentaria, to the east round Mount Isa, down through the Central Lowlands (which are below sea level) and thence SW to the sea."
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