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Snowbird
8th August 2011, 03:19
Moderators, we may need a board specifically for volcanoes into the future. They are all becoming more active globally.

I now understand what the hush-hush has been about. I've been hearing retired military people telling their friends that they are moving or have moved away from the Eastern coast of the United States. I thought that perhaps there would be some sort of invasion, but not so. This is not a happy subject.

What there may possibly be, is far worse. I'm not in any way attempting to instill fear within anyone. I for one, used to live on the West coast of the U.S. at sea level. Years ago, I decided to leave and relocate. I'm glad that I did.

The Canary Islands are located off the Eastern coast of Africa. There are seven islands. One of these islands, La Palma, is at issue here. The explanation of the danger of this volcanic island, is fully and completely explained in the videos that I have linked below. The island in and of itself, is not necessarily a threat to anyone. However, what is currently happening to oceanic magma and in addition, the possible affects of Elenin and then Planet X, may very well combine to cause what is known as a megatsunami. This is the reason that the retired military are moving to the Ozarks in the state of Arkansas.

I have also linked the first of a 5-part discussion on this subject from a forum other than PA. There is quite a lot of information within these 5 parts in case someone would like more information.


Alert - 400 Tremors In Four Days In The Canary Islands -El Hierro Volcano-Mega Tsunami Prediction ?

8sTbfPn_jns

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sTbfPn_jns


Mega Tsunami - Discovery Channel - part 3/5

KU30E1vRRu0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KU30E1vRRu0


Mega Tsunami - Discovery Channel - part 4/5

72CytIcWGcQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72CytIcWGcQ&NR=1


Mega Tsunami - Discovery Channel - part 5/5

kfFUN7SG7NE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfFUN7SG7NE&feature=related



620 Earthquakes Recorded On El Hierro In The Canary Islands

By Mark Dunphy - Tue Jul 26, 1:22 pm

http://www.irishweatheronline.com/news/earthquakesvolcanos/620-earthquakes-recorded-on-el-hierro-in-the-canary-islands/28244.html



Part 1: Why East Coast Tsunami is Soon-On-Me (New Yorkers)

This is the first of numerous installments of evidence indicating that
the entire East Coast of the Americas and the West Coast of Europe may
soon be wiped out by a landslide-driven tsunami, which is typically about
ten times greater in amplitude than an undersea earthquake-driven tsunami.
Each of these episodes will contain a different audio drama, plus these two
articles from the largest newspapers in the United States, which together
constitute an official declaration by the Federal Government of the United
States, N.A.S.A., that a massive celestial intruder, a brown dwarf star, is
being gravitationally sucked in by our Sun's irresistible gravitational force
field. Judging by the dates of these two newspaper reports, this dwarf
star's rendezvous with the Sun, in a looping U-turn, should occur in the
near future. But notice that this dwarf star must first pass by Earth, and
this explains why its 20-million mile close fly-by will gravitationally and
electromagnetically molest Earth. Even now, the area surrounding the
Cumbre Vieja volcano is exhibiting pre-eruption symptoms. Americans
and Europeans need to monitor this volcano, daily, and prepare to drive
inland when it begins to erupt, or risk being caught in the death-grip
of highway gridlock. John DiNardo

http://earthchanges.ning.com/forum/topics/part-1-why-east-coast-tsunami

WhiteFeather
8th August 2011, 03:25
I live on the east coast next to a military base in NY, there has been no activity here unless there moving at night. And I sleep like a log.

ghostrider
8th August 2011, 04:50
look for the something big to take the public eye off of the stock market and the US losing it's aaa rating. the plan goes into phase two because the money thing has been settled.

nearing
9th August 2011, 03:29
I am amazed that this thread isn't getting more play. There MUST be quite a few Avalonians living on the East Coast of the US!

Hervé
9th August 2011, 04:25
Yeah... it's been on the watch list for a while:


620 Earthquakes Recorded On El Hierro In The Canary Islands
http://www.irishweatheronline.com/news/earth-science/geology/volcano/620-earthquakes-recorded-on-el-hierro-in-the-canary-islands/28244.html

By Mark Dunphy - Tue Jul 26, 1:22 pmEdited byMark Dunphy (http://www.irishweatheronline.com/author/mark-dunphy)


http://www.irishweatheronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Location-of-tremors-on-El-Hierro.-Image-Google-Earth.jpg (http://www.irishweatheronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Location-of-tremors-on-El-Hierro.-Image-Google-Earth.jpg)
Location of tremors on El Hierro. Image Google Earth

The Canary Islands Government has said it is monitoring an earthquake swarm on the small island of El Hierro where in excess of 620 tremors of low magnitude have been recorded in the past week.

Earthquakes (http://www.01.ign.es/ign/layoutIn/volcaListadoTerremotos.do?zona=2&cantidad_dias=10), measuring between 1 and 3 on the Richter Scale, continued on Monday and more have been registered again on Tuesday. The majority of earthquakes are being recorded at a depth of between 5km and 15 km.

The Ministry of Economy, Finance and Government Security Canary has convened the first ever meeting of the Steering Committee and Volcanic Monitoring, reflected in the Specific Plan Protection Civil and Emergency for Volcanic Risk, given what it described “the significant increase in seismic activity”.

A statement (http://www.ign.es/ign/resources/sismologia/NOTA_PRENSA_COMITE_CIENTIFICO.pdf) (translated from Spanish) issued following the meeting outlined: “This committee met (Friday) at the headquarters of the Directorate General Security and Emergency Tenerife, established after the assessment of information gathered from seismic and volcanological last July 17 by the National Geographic Institute (IGN) and Volcanological Institute of the Canary Islands, the situation is total normal for the green light for the information population, activating mechanisms for monitoring and oversight needed to coordinate the actions of self civil population and information contained in the Plan.”

“According to data provided by the seismic monitoring station IGN’s located in Valverde, one can conclude that from the noon on July 17 there has been a significant increase of low magnitude seismic activity in the municipality of Border of the island of El Hierro. To improve the location of this activity, has deployed a seismic network densification operational since July 21 has helped increase the number of earthquakes located, and can be viewed at Web www.ign.es (http://www.ign.es/)”, the statement added.




http://www.01.ign.es/ign/resources/volcanologia/www/sismos_cana_move_vol.gif (http://www.01.ign.es/ign/resources/volcanologia/www/sismos_cana_move_vol.gif)
Latest tremor activity from Institute Volcanological de Canarias




http://www.irishweatheronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/The-location-of-the-most-recent-tremors-on-El-Hierro.-Image-Google-Earth.jpg (http://www.irishweatheronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/The-location-of-the-most-recent-tremors-on-El-Hierro.-Image-Google-Earth.jpg)
The location of the most recent tremors on El Hierro. Image Google Earth


http://www.irishweatheronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/800px-El_Hierro_Western_End.jpg (http://www.irishweatheronline.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/800px-El_Hierro_Western_End.jpg)
The western end of El Hierro Island (Canary Islands, Spain). Image Eckhard Pecher

El Hierro (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Hierro), a 278.5 km2 island, is situated in the most southwestern extreme of the Canaries. The island was formed after three successive eruptions, and consequent accumulations, the island emerged from the ocean as an imposing triangular pyramid crowned by a volcano more than 2,000 metres high.

The volcanic activity, principally at the convergence of the three ridges, resulted in the continual expansion of the island. A mere 50,000 years ago, as a result of seismic tremors which produced massive landslides, a giant piece of the island cracked off, crashed down into the ocean and scattered along the seabed.

This landslide of more than 300km3 gave rise to the impressive amphitheatre of the El Golfo valley and at the same time caused a tsunami that most likely rose over 100 metres high and probably reached as far as the American coast.

According to ElHierro.com (http://www.elhierro.com/geologia-en.html): “Although over 200 years have elapsed since the last eruption, El Hierro has the largest number of volcanoes in the Canaries with over 500 open sky cones, another 300 covered by the most recent outflows, and some 70 caves and volcanic galleries, notably the Don Justo cave whose collection of channels surpasses 6km in length.”

El Hierro is located south of Isla de la Palma (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Palma) (population 86,000), currently the most volcanically active of the Canary Islands. About a half a million years ago, the volcano, Taburiente, collapsed with a giant landslide, forming the Caldera de Taburiente. Since the Spanish occupation, there have been seven eruptions. In a BBC (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC) Horizon (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horizon_%28BBC_TV_series%29) programme broadcast on October 12, 2000, two geologists (Day and McGuire) hypothesised that during a future eruption, the western flank of the Cumbre Vieja (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumbre_Vieja), with a mass of approximately 1.5 x1015 kg, could slide into the ocean. This could then potentially generate a giant wave which they termed a “megatsunami (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megatsunami)” around 650–900 m high in the region of the islands. The wave would radiate out across the Atlantic and inundate the eastern seaboard of North America including the American (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States), the Caribbean (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean) and northern coasts of South America some six to eight hours later. They estimate that the tsunami will have waves possibly 160 ft (49 m) or more high causing massive devastation along the coastlines. Modelling suggests that the tsunami could inundate up to 25 km (16 mi) inland – depending upon topography.


Here where to get the PDF for the paper modelling the hypothetical tsunami in case of a massive landslide:

http://wet.kuleuven.be/wetenschapinbreedbeeld/lesmateriaal_geologie/wardday-lapalmatsunami.pdf

nearing
9th August 2011, 04:58
Anyone know if the amount of EQs they have been getting are in any way unusual? Where can we watch the action there?

Hervé
9th August 2011, 04:58
This is what the modelling of the landslide would project:



9277




According to the above model, folks on the East Coast have between 6 and 9 hours from the "Ploofff" to bug out...

Hervé
9th August 2011, 05:05
[...]
To improve the location of this activity, has deployed a seismic network densification operational since July 21 has helped increase the number of earthquakes located, and can be viewed at Web www.ign.es (http://www.ign.es/)”, the statement added.
[...]


Anyone know if the amount of EQs they have been getting are in any way unusual? Where can we watch the action there?

Check the above... :p

nearing
9th August 2011, 05:13
I appreciate all the info here but it's over a week old. I'd like to know what's going on now. Surely there must be a real-time monitor of the situation.

Hervé
9th August 2011, 05:24
[...]
can be viewed at Web www.ign.es (http://www.ign.es/)”, the statement added.
[...]

Check the above... :p





I appreciate all the info here but it's over a week old. I'd like to know what's going on now. Surely there must be a real-time monitor of the situation.


That's about the only place you can get info for the last 30 days.

nearing
9th August 2011, 05:39
[...]
can be viewed at Web www.ign.es (http://www.ign.es/)”, the statement added.
[...]

Check the above... :p





I appreciate all the info here but it's over a week old. I'd like to know what's going on now. Surely there must be a real-time monitor of the situation.


That's about the only place you can get info for the last 30 days.

Excellent, thank you, AZ.

Snowbird
11th August 2011, 12:33
This is quite an extensive info thread on this subject.

http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?14341-Threat-of-Earthquake-Predicted-For-E.-W.-Coast-Of-US-and-Mississipi&highlight=Madrid+earthquake