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

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I was going to post that it had popped up in the news section of Twitter in Canada, but by the time I noticed it had already fallen off the list.

Top view has been pretty consistent, but has reconnected a couple of times:

Side/front view:

Cone broke:
 
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PL: My great-grandfather was in the 1908 one. If he saw what was happening a century on, he would applaud.

I get that viewpoint but a lot of good people die also is the scenario they want

I'm just not for it but its fun to hypothesize the aftermath of such an event, the only thing I see happening is a power shift to the west coast which would be way worse. All the military assets out that way would just re-assert control over here and we would be ruled by Sacramento instead of DC. Nobody questions anything anymore so the braindead footsoldiers would just obey

A way worse outcome in my opinion. Ill take the softer slower tyranny of the east coast globo homo over the west coast.
 
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View attachment 2567017

Well that was uncalled for.

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Every.Single.Fucking.Time.


THE JEWS DID THIS!


ETA:
This might be an odd way of looking at things, but if I had the choice of dying in a hospice with people looking at me with pity, and all the while we both knew what the other was thinking, I'm glad that's not me, or, I wish this was you instead of me, well, fuck me, what a way to go!

50 foot Tsunami every time. Bring it on.

Talking of dying of cancer and deadly earthquake eruptions, I think now would be a good time to quote the late, great Warren Zevon:

And if California falls in to the ocean,
Like the mystics and statistics say it will,
I predict my hotel will be standing,
Until I pay my bill...
 
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Same thing with those people who talk to ghosts. You can talk to people on the other side and you just tell Bob Slob that Aunt Sally says hi and the color brown is important? Proof it's all trash. No one asks the veil lifting questions because they can't come up with any good lies to tell the people they are scamming. It's easier to say you're seeing a purple rubber ducky and a pot of pasta and wait until someone yells "OMG! It's Uncle Leroy!". :roll:

Anyway, I don't take any stock in remote viewing. I think people can have premonitions though. But it's more similar to when animals sense danger ahead of time. We have those instincts buried within us. But we are so heavily reliant on the artificial world that we aren't all that in tune with our spidey senses anymore.

I'm in Philly. I assume that's too inland to be crushed by the might of Poseidon.
I had a vivid daydream about an earthquake about an hour before an actual minor earthquake happened once. That was neat.
 
There is the propability that this will be a small cheeseburger.

The break isn't one massive one, but a smaller fragmentation that is not sudden nor fast enough to make a giant tsunami and will just flood some nignogs on the African shore.
 
Interesting stuff on La Palma TV


I always forget how tall that lava stream is.
 
That little landslide is kind of signifcant if you look at the bigger picture. Its exactly the area where the area is vulnerable to slides

My Autism couldn't help itself, I had to boot up google earth and
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The area maybe moving a bit in exactly where a slide happened 40,000 years ago...roughly the blue outline i made in the image and you can see above


Im not sure if any geologist or government official bothered to geolocate that little slide...but its significant as i said. Something is pushing down on those cliffs.

If there are anymore we may need to up the happenin con
1632683552909.jpg


And yes that blue area is enough to trigger a huge tsnunami.

It doesn't look like much but its equivlant to a few dozen Krakatoa's which killed people all the way in Africa with a 20 foot wave
 
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Hey, if it just collapses slowly, it won't cause tsunamis, right?
You are correct, the severity of a tsunami is directly related to the mass of displacement, and the speed at which it occurs. Essentially the "impulse" energy of a given event is transferred to the water, which is where the tsunami gets its energy to cause the transmission and displacement of the water volume. A very large mass moving very slowly will not cause a tsunami.
 
You are correct, the severity of a tsunami is directly related to the mass of displacement, and the speed at which it occurs. Essentially the "impulse" energy of a given event is transferred to the water, which is where the tsunami gets its energy to cause the transmission and displacement of the water volume. A very large mass moving very slowly will not cause a tsunami.
To dumb it down a bit, it's basically the same as a fat person getting into a tub. Slide in, no problem. The water level rises but there's no huge wave. Cannonball in however, and the whole bathroom is soaked.
 
There's a shit ton of new rock sat on top of the island, smaller slides are expected, are they not? I can't see the whole thing just giving away and sliding off like pizza topping.
Largely, it depends on what's under the surface really. Small slides are definitely expected and going to happen. The problem is it's impossible to tell what's going on underneath due to the geology so it's a lot of simulation prediction. Personally, I think there will be a lot of smaller slides that gradually (relatively speaking) chip away at the less stable parts of the island. But even then, that's still a good 20-30 cubic km of earth. It won't wash away the eastern seaboard but smaller islands and nearby landmasses will probably get a good soaking.
 
There's a shit ton of new rock sat on top of the island, smaller slides are expected, are they not? I can't see the whole thing just giving away and sliding off like pizza topping.

Why not? Its happened dozens of times in the last million years but your probably correct in the end that nothing happens.

I can see volcano's all over the island so whats happening isn't unusual
 
Largely, it depends on what's under the surface really. Small slides are definitely expected and going to happen. The problem is it's impossible to tell what's going on underneath due to the geology so it's a lot of simulation prediction. Personally, I think there will be a lot of smaller slides that gradually (relatively speaking) chip away at the less stable parts of the island. But even then, that's still a good 20-30 cubic km of earth. It won't wash away the eastern seaboard but smaller islands and nearby landmasses will probably get a good soaking.
Yeah I can see little bits falling away and then a half decent slip in to the sea, but for the whole area to just up and fuck off for an ocean dip...I can't see it.
Why not? Its happened dozens of times in the last million years but your probably correct in the end that nothing happens.

I can see volcano's all over the island so whats happening isn't unusual
I hope it does. I hope the island is evacuated, the volcano pulls all of the land/earth from under the surface, spews it out on top, and the whole island falls in to the sea in one huge slide, killing no locals. Then I want to watch a 20m wave flood a bit of london, wales, cornwall and France. Nothing too bad, just enough to sodden the boot soles. Meanwhile a 100m wave hits America/Mexico and drowns the entire shoreline, again, everyone evacuated, no deaths.

I just want to see some major destruction from a natural disaster that isn't cheating like a space rock.
 
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