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

Correct me if I'm wrong but wasn't also some nuclear power plants along the Atlantic coast as well?

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There's also one on the south coast on England in Dungeness. I think some models of this tsunami anticipate the English Channel exacerbating the impact of the tsunami because it's comparatively narrow and shallow there.
 
This isn't the first time they've had swarms there, though, is it? I saw news articles from 2017 talking about earthquake swarms. Not saying nothing will happen, but I don't think it is time to panic yet.
I thought the same thing, but when I went back and read the articles, the swarms were no where near as frequent and were deeper. This most recent swarm is absolutely insane and worrisome by comparison.

Nobody is doom posting. Its been stated many times this probably wont happen.

Geologists literally say the island will one day collapse, and the catalyst will be what is happening today...so it deserves discussion
Even if this turns into a nothing burger, I find stuff like this fascinating, and I had never heard of La Palma before, so thanks OP.

Also, there is good info on volcanodiscovery.com and watchers.news if you want to keep track.
 
Well played sir. You didn't mention a comet tho.
Also the solar flares destroying the internet and all electronics. And that oil tanker that's been sitting somewhere for years and might start leaking or explode.
 
Well I'm gonna say it again.
1. An eruption won't equate to a slip.
2. But if we get readings of 4.0 or above we are seeing something inevitable that will take place in a small timescale. And 3.9 is close enough.

I looked into this years ago in great detail.

But if it does slip, we will bear witness to greatest natural disaster in recorded human history bar none.

If that fault gives; and if the slip actually happens in full, the devastation will be...ghastly. Measured in the trillions.
 
Well I'm gonna say it again.
1. An eruption won't equate to a slip.
2. But if we get readings of 4.0 or above we are seeing something inevitable that will take place in a small timescale. And 3.9 is close enough.

I looked into this years ago in great detail.

But if it does slip, we will bear witness to greatest natural disaster in recorded human history bar none.

If that fault gives; and if the slip actually happens in full, the devastation will be...ghastly. Measured in the trillions.
Good, if the past 30+ years have proved that we deserve it.
 
From Sylvia Browne's book, The Other Side And Back -

In 2026, the West Coast, parts of the East Coast, and large portions of Japan will be hard hit by devastating tsunamis, or tidal waves. As a result of these tsunamis, a large new land mass will emerge among the Hawaiian Islands.

Atlantis will begin to reappear in 2023 and be fully visible by 2026.


Sylvia was full of Grade-A bologna but I'm just quoting it I don't actually care if it is true.

Pretty sure Atlantis was in what is now Mauritania so an awful lot of African desert would have to flood to recreate what Plato described.

My personal prediction? IF La Palma has a volcano under it becoming active, it will drizzle the tiniest slowest amount of lava possible and not so much as raise the temperature of the surf around the island.

It'd be interesting if I'm wrong though.
 
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