Saturday, May 16, 2015

Brazil Wildfires



Brazil as all countries suffers from wildfires.  The image below shows smoke from the Amazon basin which according to the articles I read gets into the roots and burns for years.  Drought has also cause widespread fires.  According to the article it is up 160% since September.
THE AMAZON RAINFOREST ON FIRE
 


 
Satellite of the forest fires along the Amazon River “(Smoke from wildfires covering almost all of the Amazon on August 20, 2014. For reference, bottom edge of frame is 1,000 miles and the Amazon River flows from middle left until it terminates at upper right into the South Atlantic. Image source: LANCE MODIS.)” (Amazon)
 
“Conditions in Context: 3 Percent of the Amazon Lost To Fire From 1999-2010
The new fires originated in a region now known to harbor ongoing understory fires. These fires burn beneath the interlaced root systems of the Amazon and have been discovered to continue to smolder year-round. During times of intense heat and drought, these fires can break through to the surface and more intensely burn through large swaths of forestland. After burning, they sink back into the understory, waiting for another heat/drought trigger.
 
 
Last year, NASA published a study which found that fully 3 percent of the Amazon had likely been lost to fires during the period of 1999-2010. A primary culprit for these losses was found to be understory fires, which NASA identified as a significant threat to the Amazon forest system” (Amazon)

(3 percent or 33,500 square miles of a 1.2 million square mile area under investigation burned from 1999-2010 according to a 2013 NASA study. Location of fires indicated in orange.) (Amazon)
“Perhaps most significantly, the NASA study implicated climate change as the primary cause for these fires, finding that drought and heatwaves related to increases in human heat trapping gasses had depleted ground moisture levels, resulting in a greatly increased instance of fires.
Post 2010, the satellite record indicates that these fires have continued to grow in intensity. And so the risk to the Amazon expands.
Overall, the Amazon currently stores about 120 gig tons of carbon. It represents about 10% of the global uptake of carbon from the atmosphere through forest tree and plant respiration. But as the Amazon burns and becomes deforested, it shifts from being a carbon absorber to a carbon emitter. Currently, depleted and burning areas of the Amazon are estimated to emit 500 megatons of CO2 each year. And though this has not yet tipped the balance to make the Amazon a net carbon emitter, human climate change and deforestation is driving the world’s largest rainforest rapidly in that direction.
Under human driven climate change and deforestation, the heat and drought situation will only worsen for Brazil. Even without clear cutting, the fires will expand and, eventually, the rainforest will be consumed. Without substantial mitigation action by humans, it is bound to happen. The vast carbon store that is the rainforest will almost certainly begin adding to the already rapacious human heating effect. A process that will continue for decades and will only end once the rainforest is gone entirely” (Amazon)
 
Brazil experiences sharp rise in forest fires. (Photo: AFP)
Published 12 September 2014 (15 hours 46 minutes ago)
New data published by the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research indicates a 160 percent increase in forest fires during September.
According to a new satellite data collected by the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) found that in September there were 15,622 forest fires across Brazil, which marks an increase of over 160 percent compared to the same period in 2013.             
The increase in forest fires is believed to be caused by a combination of slash-and-burn agricultural techniques, declining levels of precipitation and deforestation, which in turn, creates much drier conditions due to exposure to the wind and sun, increasing the risk of wildfires spreading inside the forest.     
Due to the impacts of climate change, change is expected to warm the air in the Amazon region by several degrees and substantially reduce regional precipitation, making understanding the interactions between droughts and fires even more important.
As a result of the findings, the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA) has recommended efforts to install natural firebreaks as well as providing land management courses to local populations.
Despite the sharp increase in forest fires, a 2014 report by the Union Of Concerned Scientists found that 80 percent of the original Amazon forest remains standing, and deforestation rates in Brazil are down 70 percent in 2013 compared with the 1996–2005 average. (www.telesurtv.net)
The data also revealed that Mato Grosso is the state most affected by fires, followed by Para and Maranhao. Together, the three states have accounted for nearly 44 percent of all outbreaks during September.
 
Brazil wildfires threaten homes and national parks  15 August 2010 Last updated at 08:31 BST    Emergency services in Brazil are struggling to control wildfires that have destroyed large areas of national parks and hundreds of homes in the north and east of the country.
    Brazil's National Space Research Institute said there had been a three-fold increase this year in the number of fires threatening rural areas in five states.Paulo Cabral reports from Sao Paulo. (BBC)
 
 
 Work Sited
 Amazon Rainforest Wildfires Scorch Through Drought-Plagued Brazil During Southern Hemisphere Winter, Aug. 20, 2014,  https://robertscribbler.wordpress.com/.../amazon-rainforest-wildfires-scorch...
Links from above site:
 
 
www.telesurtv.net/.../-Brazil-Sees-Increase-in-Forest-Fires--20140913-0002...Sep 12, 2014 - New data published by the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research indicates a 160 percent increase in forest fires during September, http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=7&ved=0CDMQFjAG&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.telesurtv.net%2Fenglish%2Fnews%2F-Brazil-Sees-Increase-in-Forest-Fires--20140913-0002.html&ei=EpZXVZ6hH8WKyAT9q4CgDg&usg=AFQjCNE9xnIA7jdxuirugUSsA66CSKvNew&bvm=bv.93564037,d.aWw
 
 

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Brazil and Climate Change and Sea Levels


Our Professor did not ask us to post our blog this week but I thought what I found very interesting and I like what Brazil is doing to help it's country and our world.  After all, I have found out that the teaching in the 60's that taught that Brazil's Amazon land could feed the world was wrong and now we know that the rainforest is so very important.  It is wonderful to see how this great nation is fighting back to improve it's land and protect it's people.

 

Brazil and Climate Change

Climate change impacts in Brazil

Climate change impacts in Brazil - what the IPCC 4th Assessment Report has found:

    In northeast Brazil semi-arid and arid areas will suffer a decrease of water resources due to climate change [3.4, 3.7]. Semi- arid vegetation is likely to be replaced by arid-land vegetation. In tropical forests, species extinctions are likely [13.4]

    Computed groundwater recharge decreases dramatically by more than 70% in north-eastern Brazil (reference climate normal 1961-1990 and the 2050s) [3.4.2.].

     Increases in rainfall in southeast Brazil have had impacts on land use, crop yields and have increased flood frequency and intensity [TS4.2].

    In the future, sea level rise, weather and climatic variability and extremes modified by global warming are very likely to have impacts on mangroves [13.4.4].

     38-45% of the plants in the Cerrado (Central Brazil savannas) committed to extinction with temperature increase of 1.7°C above pre- industrial levels [Table 4.1].

Amazonia:

     Highly unusual extreme weather events were reported, such as Amazon drought in 2005 [TS4.2].

    Potential increases in drought conditions have been quantitatively projected during the critical growing phase, due to increasing summer temperatures and precipitation declines [4.4.5]

    In non-fragmented Amazon forests, direct effects of CO2 on photosynthesis, as well as faster forest turnover rates, may have caused a substantial increase in density of lianas over the last 2 decades [1.3.5.5].

    Conversion of natural vegetation to agricultural land drives climate change by altering regional albedo and latent heat flux, causing additional summer warming in key regions in Amazon region [4.4.1]

    Major loss of Amazon rainforest with large losses of biodiversity with 2.0-3.0°C above pre-industrial levels [Table 4.1]

    Increases in temperature and decreases in soil water would lead to replacement of tropical forest by savanna in eastern Amazonia. [13.4]

 

            WWF work What WWF is doing on the ground in Brazil to protect against climate change: The indigenous population has their own ecological knowledge based on centuries surviving in natural habitats like rainforests. Often this kind of traditional knowledge includes weather prediction.

     WWF is currently setting up an initial Climate Witness project in Boca do Acre, Amazonas State, Brazil to leverage such ´traditional knowledge´.

     WWF will work with several local communities to help them develop adaptation strategies.

    The lessons learned from this first project will be expanded throughout the region, based on partnerships with community groups, NGOs and local and regional authorities

 

Brazil and Sea Levels

The fifth–largest country in the world, Brazil has a population of more than 200 million (as of 2011).13 The Brazilian coastline is roughly 5,000 miles (8,000 kilometers) long.14 Population density along the Brazilian coast is intensifying, as industrial development continues to grow, people are drawn to urban areas to work, and the tourist industry expands.15

Other areas along the Brazilian coast (from north to south) that are at risk from sea–level rise include:

Belém, Macapá, and São Luís, three capital cities on the northern coast near the Amazon River delta.14 

Atafona, a town just northeast of Rio de Janeiro that has already lost hundreds of homes to beach erosion. 16       

Famous beaches in Rio, such as Copacabana, Impanema, and the Barra da Tijuca, with miles and miles of condominiums and hotels.17 (The Barra da Tijuca will be home of the Olympic Village for the 2016 Summer Olympic Games.18)

The Santos region of São Paulo, which has a high concentration of oil and gas fields, refinery complexes, and chemical and manufacturing plants.14

Some 3.7 million people, 2 live in the Metropolitan Region of Recife, on Brazil's northeast Atlantic coast, and many of them have homes near the coast.3 Scientists estimate that a global sea–level rise of around 2.6 feet (80 centimeters) is likely by 2100—and that as much as 6.6 feet (2 meters) is possible.4 Sea–level rise puts this region and its tourist industry at risk, unless people make well–planned adaptations to higher water levels. Efforts around the world to slow sea–level rise by cutting global warming emissions are also important.             

Recife

Sea level has been rising at an accelerating pace, according to a tidal gauge on the region's coast.5

                            The region's most developed area is built on a coastal plain with an average elevation of only 13 feet (4 meters) above sea level.3 Many homes in poor neighborhoods are almost at sea level, and flooding at high tide is already a problem.6 If a storm surge of 2 feet (61 centimeters) were to arrive when sea level is nearly 3 feet (91 centimeters) higher than today, the extra 5 feet (150 centimeters) of water could ruin homes in these neighborhoods.       

What is Being Done?

                            Storm waves can pluck sand just offshore and deposit it inland. That is the way natural beaches migrate, if no roads or buildings stand in the way. However, the extensive line of high–rise buildings close to the beach leaves no room for natural beach migration from storm waves pounding the coastline near Recife.

The height of high tides in Recife ranges from 5 to 8 feet (1.5 to 2.4 meters). 21 If mean sea level rose another 2 to 6 feet (0.8 to 2 meters), which scientists say is possible, 4 high tides would be that much higher, and neighborhoods could be flooded regularly. Homes along tidal rivers will be the first to be affected. Leaders of Recife have already been considering building new apartments on safer ground, so people could move out of harm's way.16

Sea–level rise puts this region—as well as many others along the coast of Brazil—at risk unless they make well–planned adaptations to higher water levels. The steep cost of these measures could drop if people around the world make significant efforts to curb their heat-trapping emissions. If we reduce the activities that overload the atmosphere with carbon—the root cause of accelerated global sea–level rise—we can slow the pace of change and give coastal communities more time to prepare for the changes ahead

 

Brazil Has Done More to Stop Climate Change than Any Other Country, Study Finds

By Emily Atkin Posted on June 6, 2014 at 3:31 pm

 

Thanks to its effort to reduce tropical deforestation, Brazil has kept 3.2 billion tons of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere since 2004. That’s more than any other country has done to reduce climate change, according to a new study published Thursday.

“Brazil is known as a leading favorite to win the World Cup, but they also lead the world in mitigating climate change,” the study’s lead author, Earth Innovation Institute director Daniel Nepstad, said in a statement.”

Though climate change is usually traced to the burning of fossil fuels, deforestation in Brazil has also played a huge role in causing it. Brazil’s Amazon rainforest — which once had the highest deforestation rate in the world as of 2005 — absorbs a huge amount of carbon dioxide, effectively preventing the gas from being emitted into the atmosphere.            

When so much of that forest was burned and plowed over, though, a huge amount of carbon was emitted into the atmosphere instead of absorbed, making Brazil one of the world’s biggest greenhouse gas emitters. “Land use” emissions dwarfed those from energy or agriculture.

But now, Brazil seems to be taking steps to reduce their impact. The study, published in the journal Science, showed that Brazil was able to save more than 33,000 square miles of Amazon rainforest since 2004 while still being able increase beef and soy production. Saving those forests amounted to a 70 percent decline in deforestation, putting an enormous brake on greenhouse gas emissions. According to National Geographic, the cuts are more than three times bigger than the effect of taking all the cars in the U.S. off the road for a year.

In Brazil, emissions due to deforestation (green) have taken such a sharp downturn since 2004 that overall emissions have decreased in spite of continued increases from other causes.

A number of policies and campaigns are credited with motivating Brazil to reduce its deforestation, including campaigns by Greenpeace and others to put pressure on companies that buy products that come from Amazon deforestation. Brazil’s forest code was also updated in 2012, requiring landowners to preserve 80 percent of the Amazon’s virgin forest.

“In Brazil, there was rising awareness of the value of nature and how essential it is to our society,” Fabio Rubio Scarano, vice president of Conservation International’s Americas Division, told National Geographic.

Brazil’s contribution to reducing deforestation has also helped fight land-use change-related emissions throughout the world, according to a separate study by the Union of Concerned Scientists, also released Thursday. While the 2007 report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change showed that roughly 17 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions come from deforestation, the UCS says that number has now decreased to 10 percent — thanks to efforts by Brazil and several other tropical countries.

“What’s surprising about today’s report is the number of countries that are effectively protecting their tropical forests and the wide variety of policies and programs that are working,” the UCS report’s author Doug Boucher said in a statement. “There’s no one right way to stop deforestation, but rather a smorgasbord of options.”

 

Work Cited

Atkin, Emily, Brazil Has Done More To Stop Climate Change Than Any Other Country, Study Finds, published by Climate Progress at, http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/06/06/3446097/brazil-cuts-carbon/ , June 6, 2014


WWF Global, wwf.panda.org

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Brazil's coastline erosion and protection

Brazil has a huge eastern coastline along the Atlantic Ocean.  Brazil like other countries work to keep their wonderful coastline.  .The following are articles and videos that I have found on Brazil's coast and their efforts to protect them.
 I wanted to know how long the coast line is and I found the following information on the web.

This a view of the coastline near Rio de Janerio (Hodges)




Please refer to the video itself for location as for some reason I can't get this  blog to let me type below the video.  I have a lot to learn before I finish this class.   Below is some of the sites I looked at.

"The Brazilian Coastline  www.pages.drexel.edu/~weidenrl/u.htm  The  Brazilian Coastline is 4,650 miles long! The coastline has regular contours in the north of Brazil and deep indentations make excellent harbors like Rio de Janeiro, Salvador and Recife."

Coastal Erosion and Management for Safer Coasts in a Changing Climate (CEMSAC), Recife, Brazil, September 9-22, 2013

Hodges, Brian, Coastal Brazil, Abstract; By Journal Of Integrated Coastal Management “Erosão Costeira, Tendência ou Eventos Extremos? O Litoral entre Rio de Janeiro e Cabo Frio, Brasil”


 
 




 


 

jjjj

 

 
Wo
Erosion in Brazilian
Coastline
 

 

An Overview
 
 
Ministry of the Environment

Secretariat of Climate Change and Environment Quality

Division of Coastal and Air Quality
 
 
J. L. Nicolodi & A. Zamboni


Ministry of the Environment


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 




Saturday, April 18, 2015

Brazil and soil problems

 
 
Brazil one of the largest countries in the world has many soil problems from sinkholes, erosion and deforestation.  From Google I have found many videos of Brazilian soil and its problems.
 
I had been taught back in the 70's that if only we could farm the rainforest of Brazil we could feed the world.  I guess the professor who taught me this forgot about what could happen when we cut down the amazing rainforest of Brazil. 
 
Brazil's Soil 
 
 
 
Sinkholes
 
 
 
 
 
 
More on Brazil's soil
 
 
 
Deforestation of Brazil and Farming
 
 
Agriculture and deforestzation
 
 
 
 
What Brazil is doing to help
 
 
 
I guess we can't feed the world but will we still need to feed the people of Brazil and people need land to grow food.  I pray today's Brazilian knows how very valuable the forest are.   The soil of this vast country and with today's farming practices possibly we can help stop soil erosion and other problems.  Brazil has come a long ways and continues to grow.


Wednesday, April 1, 2015


 
Floods in Brazil take life and leave torrential damage behind them!

     A country with a river that is known around the word is also a country that has many floods.  Like the mighty Amazon river and its many tributaries, rain flows like a mighty river from the sky.  What it leaves behind is seen in lost of life and damage to property.  I have seen first hand what a flood can do and nearly lost my life in it.  However, I have never seen the horrid damage and loss of life that the floods in Brazil can manifest.  Whole villages and towns are lost in the floods of Brazil.  They even refer to some at Tsunamis which speak for its self.  Below are some of the pictures that are posted on the internet and above is a video of this horrific damage.
     Below is an article I found listed on the BBC network for a flood that is a result of one of the tributaries of the mighty Amazon.  The last line in this report is very familiar to me and even now so many years after the flood that nearly took my life, I still have problems sleeping in a heavy rain also.


Record floods in Brazil bring chaos to Amazon towns

 By Donna Bowater

                Amazonas, Brazil

                 11 July 2014
                        Careiro da Varzea in north-western Brazil has been flooded for more than a month



By boat, the damage to the homes is clear to spot

                Instead of football players, crossing the pitch is a small motorboat and passing through the goalmouth is the overflowing Rio Negro River. The goalposts stand half submerged, now meaningless markers on an invisible field. For more than a month, Careiro da Varzea in the Brazilian state of Amazonas has been under water in one of the worst floods on record.  It is one of almost 40 areas in Amazonas in an emergency situation or a state of calamity affecting more than 300,000 people.  Water pours through wooden bungalows in river communities, standing stagnant on the floors of their homes, bringing waterborne diseases and making access difficult without a boat.

                Meanwhile, the biggest tributary of the Amazon, the Rio Madeira, reached record heights and caused the worst flooding for a century across more remote parts of north-west Brazil and northern Bolivia.  Experts say the water is expected to remain until the middle of July before eventually subsiding, leaving those who live on the river to rebuild their vulnerable homes.  "We consider a situation to be extreme when the river reaches the emergency level," explains Marco Antonio de Oliveira, who is the regional superintendent of the Brazilian Geological Service in Manaus, the capital of Amazonas. "In this year's floods, the river reached emergency levels on 22 May. We have spent practically the whole of June above the emergency level. "It's likely that this year, the time that the…water has remained high and inside the homes of some of the poorest in Manaus will surpass 50 days." (Oliverira)

The flooding of the Rio Negro has caused losses of more than $200 million real ($91m; £53m) so far - worse even than during the record floods of 2012.From the air, it is possible to see whole swathes of towns on the banks of the Rio Negro marooned by the river.
 

 Since the end of last year, heavy rains have pushed the Rio Negro,

 which flows into the Amazon, to emergency levels.


Those who live on the rivers around Manaus have

 been left fearing for their vulnerable homes
Many communities living on the edge of Manaus, where streams known as igarapes weave their way from the river through the city, have been affected. 'Many people are suffering 'Neto Carvalho, 63, who has lived at the edge of an igarape for 20 years, filmed the worst of the flooding on his mobile phone.  "It started six months ago and it will take another six months for it to go down," he predicts.  "The water is very close. There's a lot of debris and we don't have any sanitation. The children who study on the other side [of the igarape] have to do a big detour to get to school.  "The federal government should do something. The promise was that people would be moved from here before the World Cup started. Many people are suffering." (Carvalho)




Local residents are concerned about the lack of sanitation

 and have called on the government to act
Neto Carvalho

The federal government should do something. The promise was that people would be moved from here before the World Cup started Neto Carvalho, Local resident

A state initiative to re-home those living in houses built on stilts has resettled several thousand families since 2003. But for those who remain, it is a matter of waiting until the water subsides before rebuilding their homes once again.  "Wood is expensive to buy but we're surviving," says Maria das Dores, 57, speaking on an improvised jetty from her home. "It's worse than usual.  "Antonio Costa de Oliveira, 62, who lives with his 98-year-old mother, has laid broken doors and dismantled crates over his floor as a makeshift bridge through his home.  He points to a grimy mark on the wall, about 1m (3.2ft)                above the current water level. "It rose up to here," he says. "And this is dirty water. …” (Oliveira)

"Fear of disease” [says] Celeste Oliveira Ferreira on living in the flood zone Flooding in urban areas where the streams are contaminated brings not only economic damage but also social problems including disease. More than 60 people have died in Bolivia as a result of the floods, and in Brazil there have been deaths from bacterial infections such as leptospirosis.  "The population lives with polluted water for more than 30, 40 days inside their home and this has serious consequences for their health, especially for children," Mr. Oliveira says.

 
Residents improvise by laying down wooden planks

 as make-shift bridges, but the elderly struggle

                                There is debate over what has caused this year's flooding to be so severe. Experts say extreme flooding normally happens in 10-year cycles but rivers have overflowed significantly every year for the last three years.  “We're having record floods, almost every year and when we don't have a record flood, we have a record drought.” Prof. Virgilio Viana, Sustainable Amazonas Foundation.
     Prof Virgilio Viana of the Sustainable Amazonas Foundation says an unexpected change in weather systems means more water vapor and consequently more rain have stayed in the Amazon, causing river levels to rise. "Science says that one of the clearest indicators as well as one of the clearest consequences of climate change is an increase in frequency of extreme weather events," he explains. "And that's what we're seeing in the Amazon. We're having record floods almost every year and when we don't have a record flood, we have a record drought. "Prof Viana thinks a change in attitude is required and that the changes should be seen as "a warning sign from nature that we're not doing a good job" .While Prof Viana and colleagues lobby for a change in attitude towards climate change, the annual floods are quickly becoming a nightmare for residents. “When the floods come, it's difficult. It's hard to leave for work. You wait for the bus and the bus can't pass," Celeste Oliveira Ferreira, 68, from Sao Jorge, said. "And when it rains in the night, it's hard to sleep."

 

Work Cited

BBC Report, Record floods in Brazil bring chaos to Amazon towns, July 11, 2014, By Donna Bowater

The following people were cited in the above report

Celeste Oliveira Ferreira, local Resident of Sao Jorge
Marco Antonio de Oliveira, Regional Superintendent of the Brazilian Geological Service in Manaus
 Neto Carvalho, local Resident and son of Celeste
Professor Virgilio Viana, Sustainable Amazonas Foundation
 
 

 

 

 


Saturday, March 14, 2015

Brazil's Tsunami Beach and Warning for all of us

Tsunami and Brazil

This week we learned about Tsunami's and read advice from FEMA for before, during and after a Tsunami.  We learned about Volcanic, earthquake and landslides in the ocean that can  cause a Tsunami.  In Brazil there are miles of coast lines and tsunami are a fact of life.

However, when I looked at Brazil I found another form of tsunami and that is Metrological Tsunami.  What is a Meteorological tsunami or meteotsunami you ask?  Well at UNESCO we learn; "... :  Meteorological tsunami (meteotsunami)  "Tsunami-like phenomena generated by meteorological or atmospheric disturbances. These waves can be produced by atmospheric gravity waves, pressure jumps, frontal passages, squalls, gales, typhoons, hurricanes and other atmospheric sources." "Meteotsunamis have the same temporal and spatial scales as tsunami waves and can similarly devastate coastal areas, especially in bays and inlets with strong amplification and well-defined resonant property." (Halas)



 John Halas on CARSCOPES writes:
"Sunbathers, swimmers and casual visitors at the world's longest beach, the Praia do Cassino (literally Casino Beach) in Rio Grande, Brazil, were captured by surprise this past Sunday when a bizarre natural phenomenon known as a Meteorological Tsunami, Meteotsunami or simply, weather-induced tsunami, hit the area.   It caused the sea to swell and spill out a wave that reached all the way up to the parking spots (…or at least where people had parked their rides, possibly too close to the beach), and while humans escaped unscathed, their belongings, including dozens of vehicles, were damaged, as the body of water tossed the cars around on the sand.  According to locals, this isn't the first time that such a tsunami has been observed in the area."

The following picture is one I found that must concern all of us;

 
 
Tsunami Watch
 
 
   This is a Disaster Forecast, not a Hoax
   The British National Press published articles during the
   latter part of 2004 stating that an eminent American vulcanologist, who has
   been an advisor to the United Nations and was in charge of
   tsunami research in Hawaii, has forecast
   that “during the next few decades” there is a probability
   of a tidal wave 120 feet high, hitting the American Eastern seaboard.
   George Pararas-Carayannis, a
   scientist of Greek decent, has stated that this would be caused by a series of
   three volcanoes on La Palma, in the Canary Islands, exploding, propelling a
   piece of faulted material “the size of the Isle of Man”,
   which is in the Irish Sea, into the North Atlantic Ocean.
   This fault is a fact.
   The trouble is compounded when even scientists specialising in the subject cannot agree.
   I have spoken to many people about these newspaper articles and have
   consequently found out and calculated the following information, which I feel I
   MUST pass on, in good faith, even though the news is extremely gloomy to
   millions of people.  There is no way in which any one person can be blamed for
   lack of publicity or lack of action, only Governments. There are not enough
   people who know of this danger to the planet. We are all unqualified in the
   subject of volcanoes and tsunamis, and must put our futures in the hands of
   experts, which include British scientists, to keep information like this
   available.
   “Dr. Simon Day and Bill McGuire of the Benfield Hazard Research Centre at
   University College, London agree and say that the fault is now inherently
   unstable, and that they expect it to crash into the ocean.”
   (Src. Western Morning News)
 
 
 
   Publicised Information
   The wave created would initially be in excess of 1000
   feet (300 meters) high, and would obliterate all life along many thousands of miles of
   shoreline on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, probably sinking many ships near
   both coastlines of the  Atlantic Ocean.  This wave is expected to be 120 feet (37 meters)
   high when it hits the Boston/New York area.  It is forecast to travel as far
   as 12 miles (19 Kilometers) inland from the American East Coast and  the result will be
   thousands of times worse that the New Orleans flooding, killing hundreds of
   thousands of people and leaving damage which will ruin the American economy for
   decades.
   A BBC Television programme called "10 Things you didn't know about Tsunamis"
   has been broadcast several times on BBC4 and recently (13th March 2008)
   on BBC 2, which is probably a more popular channel, and consequently the programme
   will have more impetus on the public. However, and rather puzzling, the only mention,
   again, is of the consequences to the New York/ Boston area. Possibly a financial
   consideration, I think. However this wave, or series of waves will be 5 hours old when it reaches there.  I have
   analysed, shown below, what would happen in that five hours.
   The Wave...
   ...itself  will travel through water at up to 600 miles (1000 kilometers) per hour and will
   be unseen by sea going vessels, as the wave travels within the upper layers of
   the water.   However, as it approaches the shoreline the wave erupts above the
   water level to the same height as the wave depth, in this case over 100 feet.
   There may also be a series of waves of various sizes.   100/120 feet (37 meters) refers to
   the waves in the quoted New York/ Boston area.   The effect nearer to the event
   will  be MUCH, MUCH worse.
 
 
 
   Further Specific Results
   This wave will spread in a circle, just as a
   stone  thrown into a pond forms concentric ripples.  However THIS TSUNAMI WILL
   MAKE THE INDONESIAN TSUNAMI LOOK JUST LIKE THAT — A RIPPLE.
   This tsunami will, within a few minutes, hit the Northwest African coastline
   with waves which, being closer to the event, will be possibly in excess of 800 feet
   high (240 metres) destroying all coastal cities and all life within many
   miles of the coast. There will be little possibility of any useful warning
   period.  At the same time the Canary Islands and Madeira will suffer the same
   fate.
   Soon after this, and within 2 hours of the event a wave of over 600 feet (180m)
   will sweep North and South devastating  the Azores, Gibraltar and the South
   coast of Spain, Portugal, Senegal, and Guinea.  The wave will continue on into
   the Mediterranean Sea to a similar extent as the below results.
   Within 3 hours a wave, or series of waves, over 400 feet (120 metres) high will
   inundate the whole Bay of Biscay area, and the Southern parts of England,
   Ireland and Wales.  The West African states as far South as Ghana will also be
   seriously affected by now.
   (The earlier estimates for the warning period and wave height for UK has had to
   be updated, unfortunately).
   Four hours after the event Africa will be affected as far South as Gabon, the
   first part of the Americas will be affected (the East coast of Brazil), and the
   wave will have travelled as far North as Iceland and Scandinavia, both by way of
   the Atlantic and the  English Channel and North Sea,  affecting Northern France,
    the South and East of England, including London, Belgium, the Netherlands,
   Northern Germany and Denmark on the way.
   Only after 5 hours does the wave strike the North Eastern States of the United
   States, equally devastating New York, Boston, and all the other coastal areas to
   a distance of 12 miles (20km) from the sea.
   At this stage it might be an idea to contemplate the even     worse disasters
   which would have already occurred in Africa and Europe and try to judge how much
   further the waves will have travelled overland from the coast in these, mainly
   low-lying, countries.
   You can see now, I hope, why I am anxious to get the message passed around the
   World so that SOME effort can be made to save at least SOME of the millions of
   lives which will be lost, and all in a very few short hours.
   This wave, now 5 hours old and still over 35 metres high is now affecting  the
   North coast of Brazil as far West as Trinidad and the Antilles and the African
   coast as far South as Angola.
   Within 7 hours Florida and the remainder of the West Indies will have been
   swamped, and Nicaragua, Mexico, Namibia, Cape Town and South Brazil will be
   badly affected.
 
 
 
   Closer to Home
   The wave hitting the coasts of the United Kingdom will
   possibly be around 400 feet (120 meters) high causing terrible loss of life and will
   literally wreck not only coastal towns and cities, but many inland low-lying
   ones also.
   We may well expect this tidal wave  to hit Devon and Cornwall, and South Wales
   soon after, travelling along the South West  and South coasts of England , the
   entire coast of Wales, North West England and the West coast of Scotland  and
   both coasts of Ireland.  This wave will also travel the full length of the
   English Channel, which will possibly tend to funnel the wave at a near constant
   height, ending up surging into the North Sea, flooding the Low Countries, and
   inundating London.   Unfortunately even the scientists can only speculate as to
   the height of the waves .    The death figures in UK alone will be over a million
   because there is a possibility of the population receiving  ONLY TWO
   AND A HALF HOURS NOTICE OF EVACUATION.   Do you remember how very little notice
   there was when Mount St. Helens finally blew?
   The Overall Picture
   Just imagine  the  overall picture if NO precautionary work is undertaken. The
   damage will be the same, but the loss of life will be very much higher.
   South & West England
   South & West England will suffer worst, with Penzance, Falmouth and Truro,
   Plymouth,  Torquay and
   Exeter,  Weymouth,  Bournemouth and Poole,  Portsmouth  and Southampton ceasing
   to exist. Even cities such as Salisbury and Winchester could
   suffer some flood damage, with enormous loss of life on the way.  Of course,
   this damage will continue further East and North. The East coast will be inundated,
   and all coastal and low-lying areas of Scotland will also be affected.
   On both sides of the English Channel,
   The Bristol Channel and the Irish sea. Bristol and Cardiff, even Gloucester
   and further, will suffer terribly. Many other seaside areas with hills behind
   could POSSIBLY have time to evacuate SOME of their inhabitants to higher land,
   but the majority will not be rescued in time because the  political and civic
   leaders will not have heeded this warning, or acted soon enough.
   What Can Tsunamiwatch Do?
   We, in the United Kingdom, have already contacted the Cabinet Office twice.
   They have passed the buck to DEFRA
   who, by public demand, have issued a pitiful document which shows that the political
   will is not permitting any useful warning systems, other than those available
   at present. These would be entirely inadequate - as time will tell.
   Is This Sufficient Action?
   We think not, which is why we have released this
   document, and are asking for maximum publicity from all areas of the press.
   Our Minimum Target
   is to  get all the warning sirens, used so successfully
   during the War, replaced and supplemented by extra ones so that everyone in low
   lying areas within 30 miles of the sea, lesser distances in areas with higher
   land, can be warned  as effectively as possible.
   Of course the possibility of false alarms must be looked at, but it will surely
   be best to act on every warning than to lose one's life.
   THE POPULATION WILL
   ONLY GET THE ONE CHANCE TO SURVIVE.
   Houston was evacuated, but it took two days.
   Remember that this time you may
   only get TWO AND A HALF HOURS.
   Our Immediate Aim
   is to get assurances from all the MPs representing the West and
   South coast areas, and the town, city, borough and district councils in the
   same areas, to carry out the minimum amount of preparation work, at the minimum
   cost to the country with the biggest end result. We must plan expecting the
   worst scenario. We consider that information spread in the wrong way may
   cause a certain amount of worry and lead to the lowering of coastal property
   prices to the initial detriment of the country as a whole, but THIS CANNOT BE
   HELPED. All Tsunami Watch can do is to ensure
   that the dangers are recognised
   for what they are, INTERNATIONALLY.
   Comments will undoubtedly be made by the cash-strapped Governments about
   sending television and radio announcements out.   Yes, fine, provided there are
   sufficient pre-eruption signs, and Remember,
   that there may be only two and
   a half hours warning-and in the middle of the night. Again, remember Mt. St
   Helens? There was minimal warning when that one blew.
   Important
   In the UK it will be important for each area to have a really
   effective disaster co-ordinator with a senior position in local government to
   examine the local problems for evacuation purposes.    I have been a voluntary
   Area Emergency Planner and I know from my past experience that the existing
   Emergency Planning Officers of most  UK  Councils “have been found more
   important or additional jobs already.” We can see an awareness already
   appearing among various population groups. We would suggest holding a series
   of meetings so that at least a proportion of all coast populations can work out
   for themselves  what to do and where to go, when, not
   if the time comes.
   Transport
   ... of the elderly and infirm will be a priority, but at night bus drivers
   will be at home in bed.  Where roads are going to be congested, traffic going
   INTO an area, such as Portsmouth or Plymouth would be banned, allowing double
   the normal amount of traffic for evacuation purposes, as happened at Houston.
   The Financial Cost
   In the end, and WHEN it  happens,
   the financial cost will be astronomical, IN
   EVERY COUNTRY INVOLVED. In the meantime, if  Governments act quickly and
   quietly loss of life can be minimised. A  much higher loss of life will occur
   if Governments do not take notice, and if some action is not taken soon.
   We would appreciate being informed of any and all useful and meaningful
   decisions made in any areas, so that expert advice can be  centralised and made
   available to as many people as possible.
   PLEASE REMEMBER this disaster may not happen straight away.
   It may be twenty,
   forty, sixty, eighty years ahead, but on the other hand it COULD be next week.
   Very importantly and finally, I have to say that although all of this
   theoretical work was done, as mentioned in the second paragraph, “in good
   faith”, it was started by working on the assumption that the newspaper quote
   was correct. I have only just found out, late in November 2005, from Dr.
   George Pararas-Carayannis himself that he was misquoted.
   He has kindly written “please do not be so hard on yourself and do
   continue with your well intented efforts to properly educate the public
   about disasters and needed preparedness.”
   What I have also learned is the ineffectiveness of government and local
   MPs when you need them. They care little about the fact that well over a
   million British people could possibly have drowned within the loose time-scale
   referred to. My letters to the government have had little impact to date.
   At least we have learned not to rely on government but to try
   talking to local government about early warning systems. (Tsunami Watch)
   



Work Cited
 
 
Halas, John, Freaky Meteotsunami Tosses Parked Cars Around at Brazilian Beach,Tuesday, February 11, 2014 at 5:01 pm, | www.carscoops.com/2014/02/freaky-meteotsunami-tosses-parked-cars.html

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