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jagman
5th October 2011, 17:32
http://download.coasttocoastam.com/pages/Deyo_map1_100311a.jpg
http://download.coasttocoastam.com/pages/Deyo_map2_100311b.jpg
Stan & Holly Deyo sent us two graphics to accompany their presentation on the 10/3/11 show.

Amity
5th October 2011, 17:38
Can you explain these maps please because I don't understand when or what these prophecies are meant to be.

Really hope it's all nonsense because this would be devastating for many lives.

Thank you.

Light an love always.

RMorgan
5th October 2011, 17:52
Well, I only know one thing. Not every earth quake is able to cause big Tsunamis. Canary Islands, specifically, are on the other side of the ocean, and if a huge earth quake happens there, I don´t think it could cause a tsunami that will be able to reach the Americas, if it causes any relevant tsunami.

You know, imagine the physics behind regular waves. Some beaches have amazing waves, others not. The ground, the terrain bellow the ocean is the key to the formation of waves, including tsunamis.

The Atlantic ocean is amazingly deep at some points and it may very wall absorb the power of a tsunami a long time before it would be able to reach this side of the Atlantic.

Just take all recent tsunamis as an example. All of them only had catastrophic results locally.

MorningSong
5th October 2011, 18:11
I guess jagman is referring to this:

QbKnfB2uOi4

Calz
5th October 2011, 18:15
Canary Island tsunami is based on scientific modeling and not history.

Cannot say it will *not* happen ... but evidence does not suggest it will.

If you live on the east coast of america it is your own call ...

(caveat ... scientists are paid by who ... the PTB/W)

IMHO

RMorgan
5th October 2011, 18:37
Of course, in the worst scenario, it could provoke a mega-tsunami, but it´s very unlikely.

There is no indication at present that the low magnitude seismic activity is a precursor to any significant volcanic activity or, indeed, stronger earthquake activity. Since the Spanish occupation, there have been seven eruptions. More than 200 years have elapsed since the last eruption. None of these eruption caused strong tsunamis, as far as I know.

Anyway, here´s a video of what a mega-tsunami would look like, if it comes to happen.

uhVYVzO2NQs

mosquito
6th October 2011, 03:38
What is of most concern (for me anyway) about the canary island tsunami, and which no-one seems to be paying any attention to, is the effect it would have on the Amazon basin.

Hervé
6th October 2011, 10:43
Let's try and get a few things straight here:


[...]
... this is what we are trying to disentangle and clarify here (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?30888-After-tirelessly-updating-Avalon-for-weeks...it-s-official-evacuation-is-in-progress&p=324457&viewfull=1#post324457):


"Most urgent is John Moore's report from his contact that a volcano
on the Canary Islands is about to erupt in about seven to ten days.
Geologists agree that if the Cumbre Vieja volcano erupts, its resulting
landslide will surely generate a tsunami that will kill many millions
of people along the East Coast of the Americas, from Canada, down
over the United States, the Caribbean Islands, and down through
Central and South America."

John Moore is a good guy but he has got his data completely confused: the volcano that may erupt is El Hierro, not the Cumbre Vieja. With the switcheroo, there goes :bigfish: switching from El Hierro to Cumbre Vieja...


Then, even with the Cumbre Vieja, there is the matter of how fast a slide of its flank can take place... anything more than instant and there goes the doom & gloom propaganda down the drain!

Simply because the catastrophic model used wouldn't work anymore if the slide takes an hour or more to complete.

Even if Cumbre Vieja erupts as it did very recently -- without one of its flanks sliding more than 4 meters; that is, like a house, it settled better on its foundations -- a full slide is not a necessary result.

One can go down very dark rabbit holes with "ifs," but what's the actual reality?

That's what we are attempting to establish in this thread (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?30888-After-tirelessly-updating-Avalon-for-weeks...it-s-official-evacuation-is-in-progress&p=324457&viewfull=1#post324457).


Always, always, always... follow the @#&%^! money:


When the original research was published in 2001 [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 Spanish press and scientists were heavily critical of the way it was reported. El País noted that the research group was entirely funded by an insurance company, something entirely ignored by the British press.

". it is hypothetical and moreover improbable, and the model would not have passed the stage of an elegant theoretical exercise if the authors had not spent a week publically airing it before publishing it tomorrow in a specialised journal. Why so much interest in publicising it? The explanation perhaps lies in the fact that the research centre is funded by an insurance company, concerned with natural catastrophes ".

Thanks to Stegosaur (http://http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?31381-Heads-Up&p=324227&viewfull=1#post324227) for discovering the article the above is excerpted from: http://www.iberianature.com/material/megatsunami.html

Said article where I found I am not alone in my assessment of Cumbre Vieja:



Latest from BBC 29 October 2004
Tidal wave threat 'over-hyped'
The risk of a landslide in the Canary Islands causing a tidal wave (tsunami) able to devastate America's east coast is vastly overstated.

That is the view of marine geologists studying ancient landslides in the area.
In typical Canary Island landslides, chunks of land break off in bits, not in one dramatic plunge, they argue.

This contradicts previous warnings that an Isle of Man-sized chunk of land could fall off the island of La Palma into the sea, causing a mega-tsunami.
Full article here (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3963563.stm)


Both Stan Deyo and John Moore have vested interests in catastrophic speculations as they both sell preparedness plans and items and are consultants for hire on disaster prevention...

Me think it's time to revise the origins and perpetuation of these speculated "catastrophes."

That said, a few well placed "explosive charges" could very well make me, and other experts, wrong... and it wouldn't surprise too many people as it is now a highly anticipated outcome due to the drummed up propaganda.