NEXT MOUNT RAINIER EXPLOSION WILL DROWN GREATER SEATTLEIN A GIGANTIC RIVER OF HOT MUD [with a Comment by Aton]
Strange Sounds
[3-20-20]
ATON: I have instructed Anne to post this article. Although it was written one year ago does not mean it is out-of-date. It is more applicaple for today than a year ago, as it is not if Mt. Rainer will eplode, it is when, and that, my dear ones, could now be any day. Her voice is rising with constant rumbling, and is getting louder. Isn't is great how informed you are with your totally fake MSM? Hmmmm....
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Poor Seattle can’t catch a break.
It is prone prone to giant earthquakes and even more terrible, the entire Greater Seattle is at the risk of being buried under a sea of hot mud.
We’ve already covered how the mild-mannered city of Seattle is particularly prone to giant earthquakes… But it actually gets worse…
The area lies downstream from Mount Rainier, which carries the questionable honor of being one of the most dangerous volcanoes in existence.
Lahar not lava
However, this particular danger doesn’t come from soot and magma. Sure, there would be some if it was to erupt, but that would be just the icing on the horror cake.
The true killer would be a lahar, whose nerdy name betrays its potential for destruction. Lahars are giant flows of hot mud, trees and water, rolling forward with the consistency of a zillion tons of wet cement and at speeds up to 60mph.
600 Feet Lahar
Urban Seattle could be facing a Lahar as tall as 600 freaking feet. How do we know? Because it’s happened before!
Around 5,000 years ago, a giant lahar called the Osceola Mudflow filled a part of Puget Sound with three cubic kilometers of hot, steamy, gooey mud. What was once a pristine sea was, in a matter of hours, suddenly 200 square miles of new land.
For comparison, the disastrous 1985 Nevado del Ruiz lahar that killed 25,000 people in Colombia only had 2.5 percent of the volume of the Osceola Mudflow.
Lahars doesn’t need a volcanic eruption?
A lahar detection system was installed in 1998, but it remains loose and incomprehensive.
To make matters worse, these mud tsunamis are a right bastard to detect.
A lahar doesn’t need a volcanic eruption as an excuse to kick in. A sector collapse or some magma leakage could be enough to send a mudnami the size of Godzilla into Seattle.
If just the Puyallup Valley lahar sparks off, material damages alone could be as high as $13 billion.
Also, a non-volcanic lahar could easily spread from one to several of the six Mount Rainer lahar systems, multiplying the destruction.
So you now probably understand why all earthquake swarms in the vicinity of Mount Rainier drive people crazy.
By the way you can download a new documentary film about Cascadia Below… It’s really worth your money!
(Go to this live link and click on the picture below).
https://strangesounds.org/2020/03/seattle-lahar-mount-rainier-video.html
ALSO SEE VIDEO:
https://strangesounds.org/2020/03/seattle-lahar-mount-rainier-video.html