WE HAVE MOVED!

"And I beheld, and heard the voice of one eagle flying through the midst of heaven,
saying with a loud voice: Woe, woe, woe to the inhabitants of the earth....
[Apocalypse (Revelation) 8:13]

Sunday, March 18, 2018

Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake update: Thousands of people are expected to be killed as forecast in last official report

Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake update: Thousands of people are expected to be killed as forecast in last official report
INCLUDES LATEST REPORT ON YELLOWSTONE (NOT LOOKING GOOD) & ANOTHER GIANT EARTH CRACK REPORTED!


Damage estimates in the latest report are significantly higher than those given in previously published studies if a M9.0 earthquake hits along the Cascadia Subduction Zone.

Thousands of people are expected to be killed or somehow injured when a major earthquake hits, according to a newly released report prepared for the Regional Disaster Preparedness Organization (RDPO). Depending on when a 9.0 Cascadia Subduction Zone (CSZ) earthquake hits, the death toll and number of injured could reach into the “low tens of thousands.


This video recaps a new DOGAMI study of potential impacts of a Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake on the Portland region. DOGAMI’s John Bauer, the lead investigator on the study, walks through the study’s science and results, including study estimates of injuries, people needing shelter, building damages, and building debris:

The report provides damage and casualty estimates to buildings, people, and key infrastructure sectors resulting from a major earthquake in the Portland metropolitan region by using updated local geologic information and recent advances in loss estimation methods.
Damage estimates in the latest report are significantly higher than those given in previously published studies. The increase comes after researchers used updated building inventory “that more accurately reflects the region’s building code history with respect to seismic resiliency, and usage of updated soils and liquefaction susceptibility data.
The majority of buildings in the study area do not meet current seismic building code standards, although the buildings did meet code standards in place at time of construction,” the report states.
The authors of the report urge state and local government to offer incentives “and other options that encourage building owners to seismically upgrade their buildings. Such upgrades will reduce casualties and building repair costs and will minimize potential loss of businesses and workforce housing. Jurisdictions can consider triggers that require seismic upgrades, such as a major building renovation.”

Giant 3-km-long crack cuts off heavy traffic road in Kenya after torrential rains

The Narok – Mai Mahiu road has been reopened to traffic after repair works on the section that had been cut off by flood waters. Hundreds of travellers were stranded for hours on road after a section of the road collapsed on Tuesday night. The giant crack responsible for the collapse is 3 kilometers long and at least 6 meters deep. The heavy rains killed one schoolgirl. Three other students from a local secondary school were saved from being swept away and taken to hospital.

Here some pictures of the natural disaster:

giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
giant crack kenya, giant crack kenya video, giant crack kenya pictures, giant crack kenya march 2018
A giant crack opened up in Kenya, cutting off a busy road after heavy rains.
After the lightning that killed more than 15 people in Rwanda, now deadly floods damage Kenya. SOmebody has something against Africa right now!

 

Hello! Yellowstone Is Talkin’ and Talking Big! Steamboat Geyser Roars to Life, Not Since 2014 – A Series of Minor Eruptions or Time to Take Cover? (Videos)

The tallest active geyser in the world may be erupting for the first time since 2014, according to the National Park Service.


#Yellowstone National Park employees reported seeing the Steamboat Geyser erupt on Thursday evening, the park service announced Friday. Park geologists then compared the accounts to thermal sensors in the area and determined it “could be a series of minor eruptions.”

Steamboat Geyser in Yellowstone Park erupts

Source KTVQ News

 

#megavolcano #yellowstone #supervolcano #endtimes #earthquake #prep #survival #shtf

Yellowstone on brink of ERUPTION as giant geyser starts to BLOW

A YELLOWSTONE National Park geyser could be on the brink of erupting, experts have warned.
Signs of activity have been recorded from its powerful Steamboat Geyser – the world’s tallest – in recent days.
It is the first time it has shown the signs of potential eruption since 2014, reports CBS News.
Experts say there “could be a series of minor eruptions” at the US tourist hotspot.
But the geyser lies 15 miles away from a supervolcano, which has recently been declared as showing signs of “strain”.
The supervolcano has long been the subject of fears it may one day blow its top, and the activity of the Steamboat Geyser is likely to throw it back into the limelight.
The geyser can shoot water of more than 300 feet.
However Jacob Lowenstern, a former scientist in charge of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, believes a major eruption is a long way off.
He said: “Minor earthquakes occur in the Yellowstone area 50 or more times per week, but a major eruption is not expected in the foreseeable future.”
Daily Star Online previously revealed how scientists believe they have found a major breakthrough in when the supervolcano previously erupted.
A team at the University of California determined it last blew its top 630,000 years ago.
And astonishing new research suggests there was not just one eruption, but two, 170 years apart.
Geologist Jim Kennett said: “We discovered here that there are two ash-forming super-eruptions 170 years apart and each cooled the ocean by about 3°C.”
Source Daily Star

#SteamboatGeyser: World’s tallest active #geyser eruption come from deep in #Yellowstone

The tallest active geyser in the world may be erupting for the first time since 2014, according to the National Park Service.
Yellowstone National Park employees reported seeing the Steamboat Geyser erupt on Thursday evening, the park service announced Friday. Park geologists then compared the accounts to thermal sensors in the area and determined it “could be a series of minor eruptions.”
Wednesday, Sept 3, 2014: Steamboat Geyser in Yellowstone’s Norris Back Basin erupted unexpectedly Wednesday evening. Rosa Prasser, a Yellowstone Ranger, witnessed the eruption at 11:00 pm.
Steamboat Geyser is in the Norris Geyser Basin, which is currently closed to vehicle access for spring plowing.
Unlike Old Faithful, which, as its name indicates, erupts on a relatively predictable timeline, Steamboat Geyser is impossible to anticipate.
It went eight years without a major eruption before shooting water into the sky on July 31, 2013 and again on Sept. 3, 2014, according to a 2014 report by the United States Geological Survey.
Historically, the geyser has gone anywhere from four days to 50 years in between eruptions.
Yellowstone National Park contains more than 10,000 thermal features and sits on top of the world’s largest volcano, capable of sending 2,000 times more matter into the sky than the Mount St. Helens eruption. The last volcanic eruption at Yellowstone was 70,000 years ago.
Steamboat eruptions, as with other geysers in Yellowstone, have little if any connection to the deeper volcano, said Jacob Lowenstern, former scientist in charge of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory.
“Their plumbing systems are in the upper few hundred feet of the Earth,” he said. “As you get hotter and hotter and deeper and deeper, the permeability and ability of water to move around shuts off. There’s not a whole lot of connectivity of the reservoirs once you get deep.”

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