La Palma is rumbling - What are the implications of a 40 foot Tsunami along the east coast?

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Maybe it'll flood some of the Embarcadero close to the warf in SF or it might rise the tide enough to keep all the naked people from the nude beaches.

Unfortunately mother nature wasn't sending her best this go around, 1-3ft is a minor annoyance, not Japan 2011 levels of catastrophe.
 
Guess Bushcraft Bear picked a bad time to move back to the island.
Did he ever elaborate on the health problem which drove him back to Germany? It seems like his videos stopped showing up in my suggestions directly after.
 
Thought about this volcano today for the first time in months. Still hoping for a tsunami to wipe out most of the population. 🤞🏻
 
Edited:
Not seeing any news articles on this yet, https://www.guidetocanaryislands.co...he-likely-cause-for-tremor-felt-gran-canaria/

Meteor hit Gran Canaria, I assumed it was La Palma first. Bushcraft Bear is apparently about to do a livestream to discuss it.

 
Edited:
Not seeing any news articles on this yet, https://www.guidetocanaryislands.co...he-likely-cause-for-tremor-felt-gran-canaria/

Meteor hit Gran Canaria, I assumed it was La Palma first. Bushcraft Bear is apparently about to do a livestream to discuss it.

The hits just keep coming to Bear.
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First, it ripped the sky over La Palma, La Gomera and Tenerife at great speed, like lightning that emitted colours with shades of green and red, to then cause such a roar over Gran Canaria that it was heard from many areas of the island before, finally, crashing in the sea, causing astonishment among the islanders who, at first, didn’t know what it was.

Scientists have confirmed that it was a meteorite which, although it is not the first to fall in the Archipelago, there are no precedents for what happened yesterday, as it was accompanied by tremors. Fortunately, the Emergency Services announced that there is no record that it caused injuries or material damage.

The incident occurred yesterday (Wednesday) just after 3pm, although the exact time of the impact recorded by the measurement systems installed by Involcan and the National Geographic Institute (IGN) recorded various readings between 3:16pm and 4:35pm.

The first alert the Emergency Services received came from the province of Tenerife, due to reports of a very fast green and red object in the sky. But what really triggered all the alerts occurred immediately afterwards, when a huge roar was heard over Gran Canaria that residents of municipalities across the island including Agaete, San Bartolomé de Tirajana, Santa Brígida and Las Palmas demanded, with some concern, information about the noise and tremors.

"Even the window panes and blinds trembled," say those who phoned 112 to report it. Their testimonies regarding the sound spread too far to be, for example, an airplane breaking the sound barrier, which was one of the initial hypotheses.

Seismic activity was also ruled out, without leaving any room for doubt by scientists in less than an hour. While it was urgently verified that no one was in danger or that there had been any emergency associated with this phenomenon, everything pointed to an object arriving from outer space.
 
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