FEARS OF TSUNAMI FOR U.S. WEST COAST AS ERUPTING HAWAII VOLCANO FRACTURES MASSIVE UNSTABLE LANDMASS
5 May, 2018
Scientists
from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) have contacted me
regarding a staggering development taking place right now during the
eruption of the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii: An
area of land on the south flank of the volcano known as the "Hilina
Slump" - about the size of Manhattan - is
moving and could BREAK OFF into the ocean, sending a Tsunami toward
the west coast with 100+ foot waves moving at 500 miles per hour.
Cities like San Diego, Los Angeles and others could be wiped off the
face of the earth.
They
say the bosses at USGS know about this and are intentionally
concealing it from the public for fear of causing a panic.
Media outlets in Hawaii and in Los Angeles have allegedly been
specifically told not to say anything . . . yet . . . for the
same reason.
I
am breaking this story.
As
most of the civilized world knows by now, the Kilauea volcano on the
south side of Hawaii's big island, began erupting earlier this week.
Prior
to the appearance of lava at the surface, hundreds of small
earthquakes were felt. Then the quakes got bigger. A
magnitude 5.6 struck Thursday evening and a strong Magnitude 6.9 was
a sort of announcement by the volcano that it was time to blast off.
This map from the USGS web site, shows the location of the
Magnitude 6.9 quake and the rings indicate how far away the quake was
felt:
Within
minutes of that M6.9 quake, 2,000 degree lava began shooting out of
the ground -- over 100 feet into the air -- through cracks in
roads up
to 12 miles away from the volcano crater! The
lava quickly set homes ablaze.
Roads
became impassable:
The
lava is destroying everything in its path:
The
lava is not stopping. Other roads are now cracking open with
super-heated steam and toxic gases spewing out:
Evacuations
were ordered, with more than ten thousand people told to flee for
their lives.
But
this is far from the worst of it. While all this shaking and
spewing is taking place, the land atop all this lava activity is
literally moving toward the ocean. Specifically, an area of
land about the size of Manhattan in New York City, called the "Hilina
Slump" is not only moving, deep cracks are appearing which SOME
geologists fear are indications the Hilina Slump is going to BREAK
OFF of the island, and fall into the ocean in one giant splash.
The
Hilina Slump is an area of about 5,000
cubic miles of
dirt and rock. If it breaks off and slides into the ocean (as
has happened 60 times in the past elsewhere in the Hawaiian islands)
a Pacific-wide-Tsunami would
be generated, hitting the U.S. west coast with waves over 100 feet
tall moving at 500 miles per hour.
San
Diego, Los Angeles and other major cities would be wiped off the
face of the earth.
This
is a geological map of the Kilauea Volcano showing the Hilina Slump:
IT HAS HAPPENED BEFORE
The
Hawaiian Islands are home to the largest documented shoreline
collapse in history, an ancient seaward landslide that sent rocks
from the island of Oahu to sites more than 100 miles offshore. The
avalanche of debris from the northeast shore of Oahu probably
occurred between 1.5 and 3 million years ago, and it undoubtedly
created one of the largest tsunamis in Earth's history, a wave large
enough to inundate every coastline of the northern Pacific Ocean.
Today,
geologists are saying that seismic and tectonic forces are
creating the potential for a similar disaster on the southeast shore
of the big island of Hawaii, near Kilauea volcano. The world's most
active volcano, Kilauea is continually growing larger. At the same
time, its seaward flank is moving toward the Pacific, currently at
the rate of about 10 centimeters per year. Kilauea's movement takes
several forms. Layers of lava and sediment atop the mountain are
pulled down by the force of gravity. The entire mountain itself also
moves slowly out to sea as magma derived from deep within the earth's
mantle intrudes into the core of the volcano.
"From
previous studies, we know that Kilauea is the site of an active
landslide, the Hilina slump, which has moved in historic times,"
said Julia Morgan, assistant professor of Earth Science at Rice
University in 2003. "We now recognize that Kilauea also
experienced a catastrophic landslide in the past, possibly within
25,000-50,000 years, which is quite recent in geologic terms."
The
10-by-15 mile Hilina slump is now partially detached from the seaward
flank of Kilauea, and a candidate for catastrophic collapse.
The Volcano is moving!
While
there is no real consensus on why Hawaiian volcanoes move, the fact
is that they do move. One of two things can happen when you apply
enough force to move a volcano; neither is particularly good.
First,
the volcano can move or slide fairly easily along its base. Generally
the movement is relatively continuous, however a bit of sticking here
and there can generate some rather large earthquakes. That's
what we've had this week with Kilauea. Sticking, then earthquakes.
The
structure that results from this type of movement is called a
"slump." Generally, a large block of the volcano slides
coherently and stretches the volcano. Because the block is
lengthening, it must also get thinner. The result of this is a set of
cuspate normal faults near the head of the slump. The blocks on the
seaward side of the fault drop downward due to the fact that the
moving block is thinner.
The
Hilina slide on the southern side of Kilauea is an excellent example
of a slump. The large "palis" or cliffs on the south side
of Kilauea are the tops of the extensive fault system at the head of
the Hilina slide. The faults downdrop blocks towards the coast over
2000 feet in places. The downdropped coastal side of the fault blocks
are probably tilted back towards the rift zone, but have been filled
in by numerous lava flows making them slope very gently (about 1
degree) towards the ocean.
During
the 1990's, Kilauea was moving an average of about 10 cm a year
seaward. This is a lot of movement for such a large object.
This is a lot of ground to break and as you can imagine it results in
some pretty large earthquakes. The last time that this appears to
have happened was in 1868 and the result was the M8 Kau Earthquake.
Second,
the volcano can get stuck and suddenly release, causing a massive
earthquake and landslide. The Hilina Slump is said
to be "the most rapidly moving tract of ground on Earth for its
size." The Hilina Slump can move much faster.
At 4:48 AM, November 29, 1975, a 37-mile-wide section suddenly
dropped 11½ feet and slid seaward 26 feet. The result was a
magnitude-7.2 quake and a 48-foot-high tsunami around Hawaii. This
was a minor movement
of the slump. If
the entire 4,760-cubic-mile block broke off, (as some
geologists who spoke with me today believe may take place) it would
probably create a magnitude-9 quake and a tsunami 1,000-feet high.
All
the coast-hugging cities of the Hawaiian Islands would be swept away.
And LOOK OUT Australia, Japan, and California.
(SOURCE:
Napier, A. Kam; "Landslide," Honolulu,
p. 28, February 1997. Cr. H. DeKalb.)
Tsunamis
travel at jet speeds on the deep, open, ocean and have such small
amplitudes that ships rarely notice them. Only when they reach
shallow water as they approach land, do they slow down and reach
monstrous sizes.
It
is about 2500 miles from Hawaii to Los Angeles. Given that
Tsunamis travel at about 500 MPH, the ten million people living in
and around L.A. would have between four and five HOURS to evacuate
the entire city once the Hilina Slump collapses into the ocean. How
the hell do you evacuate ten million people in 4 to 5 hours?
And
that's just Los Angeles. What about the other large cities on
the west coast: San Diego? San Francisco?
The
fact that certain bosses at the USGS have told their subordinates not
to reveal the magnitude of what's happening right now in Hawaii for
fear of causing a panic is, in one aspect, noble. But the other
aspect is HOW DO YOU EVACUATE TEN MILLION PEOPLE IN FOUR TO FIVE
HOURS?
Quite
simply, you don't. It cannot be done.
This
is a brief, four minute video showing what would happen if the Hilina
Slump falls off the Kilauea Volcano into the ocean. The story,
with some important advice, continues below the video:
MAKE A PLAN RIGHT NOW
I
want to be explicitly clear to all the folks on the west coast: At
this time, there is NO tsunami and that may remain the situation.
There is NO NEED TO PANIC or to evacuate at this time.
Yet,
given the fact that officials in Hawaii and at the US federal level
already know the Hilina Slump is moving and they are not telling
anyone, it seems to me (as a reasonable person) the concealing of
this information is not a wise decision.
Folks
along the west coast should have a plan. If an evacuation order
comes out, you'd better know at that instant where
you're going and how you're getting there because believe me, when
ten million other people find out they have to run for their lives or
be killed by a tsunami in four or five hours, it will be utter,
unimaginable, chaos.
Again, there
is no need to panic, or to evacuate now. But be acutely
aware of what is taking place right now in Hawaii because if the part
of the Kilauea volcano called the Hilina Slump collapses into the
ocean, you will be lucky to escape with your lives once an evacuation
order is given.
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