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East Coast Tsunami: If It Happens,
MILLIONS Of Americans Could Die
By Michael Snyder, on March 2nd, 2015
Could you imagine what would happen if a tsunami
hundreds of feet high slammed into the east coast of the United States at
several hundred miles an hour? Just because it has never happened during
any of our lifetimes does not mean that it can’t happen.
In fact, scientists tell us that there is a very
good chance that it will happen someday. And if it does happen, there is
a very good chance that the number of dead Americans could be in the millions.
Even though there are “Tsunami
Hazard Zone” signs on Florida beaches to remind us of this
potential threat, we have built giant cities right along the edge of the water
all along the Atlantic coast.
Today, an astounding 39 percent of all
Americans live in counties that directly border a shoreline. The
potential damage that a major east coast tsunami could do would be
unimaginable.
Remember, those living along the Indian Ocean
never expected a tsunami in 2004, and those living in Japan never imagined what
would hit them in 2011. These things do happen, and it might very well
happen to us one day.
If you do not think that this is within the realm
of possibility, just consider what the
Washington Post has had to say on the matter…
However, while there is no indication it could
happen soon (but could), there are scientifically sound
reasons for concern that at some point a mega-tsunami
could engulf the entire East Coast with a wave almost 200 feet high sweeping
everything and everybody up to 20 miles inland. The
consequences of such a relatively unlikely but very possible event in loss of
life and property are inestimable and beyond the realm of imagination.
Yes, there has not been a major tsunami event
along the perimeter of the Atlantic Ocean during any of our lifetimes.
But it has happened.
The most famous Atlantic Ocean tsunami during
recorded history happened in
1755…
The most widely known Atlantic Ocean tsunami
struck Lisbon, Portugal on November 1, 1755 . It was caused by a magnitude 8.6
earthquake beneath the floor of the Atlantic about 100 miles offshore. This
earthquake and associated tsunami destroyed most of the city of Lisbon.
Waves up to 12 meters high hit the coastlines of
Spain and Portugal just minutes after this earthquake. Over nine hours later
waves with seven meter runup heights arrived in the Caribbean and caused
significant damage. The earthquake and tsunami killed between 60,000 and
100,000 people.
And National
Geographic says that there have been 37
verified tsunamis in the Caribbean since 1498.
So these things do happen from time to time.
But why should we be concerned now?
What could possibly cause a mega-tsunami to slam
into the east coast today?
Well, according to the
Washington Post, there are a couple of scenarios that scientists
are focused on…
The first is a submarine landslide at the edge of the continental shelf off the
coasts of Virginia and North Carolina where unstable sections of the shelf
could collapse into the trenches of the deep ocean. Should that occur
scientists believe an 18-foot-high tsunami would propagate towards the coast
and strike in a matter of hours.
The second time bomb is a mega-tsunami caused by a
massive landslide as a large section of La Palma, one of the Canary Islands in
the Eastern Atlantic, collapses into the ocean following a volcanic eruption of
the Cumbre Vieja volcano on La Palma. If (when) this occurs, modeling results
indicate a wall of water up to 300 feet high would race across the Atlantic and
reach the East Coast in about nine hours with devastating effects.
If a 300 foot tall tsunami did “race across the
Atlantic” and slam into the United States, the devastation would be beyond
anything that any of us have ever seen before.
The following excerpt from an article posted
on Modern
Survival Blog gives you a little bit of an
idea how incredibly vulnerable we are…
Regardless of the factors, I felt that you may be
curious to see following elevation graphics that I layered together which
increment 75 feet all the way to 300 feet in height along the U.S. East Coast.
I would guesstimate that if you live within 20 miles of the coast, you may be
vulnerable to a Canary Island ‘event’. Fortunately, these don’t happen very
often…
Several observations regarding a 300 foot tsunami
would be the probable devastation of the following major East Coast cities…
Portland, ME (~ 50′)
Boston, MA (~ 30′)
New Haven, CT (~ 50′)
Bridgeport, CT (~ 40′)
New York City, NY (~ 20′)
Jersey City, NJ (~ 30′)
Newark, NJ (~ 50′)
Atlantic City, NJ (~ 10′)
Wilmington, DE (~ 80′)
Philadelphia, PA (~ 40′)
Virginia Beach, VA (~ 10′)
Wilmington, NC (~ 20′)
Myrtle Beach, SC (~ 20′)
Charleston, SC (~ 10′)
Savannah, GA (~ 10′)
Daytona Beach, FL (less than 10′)
West Palm Beach, FL (less than 10′)
Fort Lauderdale, FL (less than 10′)
Miami, FL (less than 10′)
Boston, MA (~ 30′)
New Haven, CT (~ 50′)
Bridgeport, CT (~ 40′)
New York City, NY (~ 20′)
Jersey City, NJ (~ 30′)
Newark, NJ (~ 50′)
Atlantic City, NJ (~ 10′)
Wilmington, DE (~ 80′)
Philadelphia, PA (~ 40′)
Virginia Beach, VA (~ 10′)
Wilmington, NC (~ 20′)
Myrtle Beach, SC (~ 20′)
Charleston, SC (~ 10′)
Savannah, GA (~ 10′)
Daytona Beach, FL (less than 10′)
West Palm Beach, FL (less than 10′)
Fort Lauderdale, FL (less than 10′)
Miami, FL (less than 10′)
There are countless cities in between these
coastal cities. The Eastern Seaboard of the United States includes some of the
largest metropolitan areas in the country. Over one third of the country (more
than 100 million people) live along the East Coast. Evacuation would be
virtually impossible for most (except for the astute who act quickly) due to
only hours notice, probable doubt, and the subsequent immediate gridlock that
would follow.
And since nearly the entire state of Florida is
close to (or below) sea level, there would be next to nothing to stop it from
sweeping across the entire state. The following is an excerpt from an article about
how incredibly flat Florida is…
South Florida has two big problems. The first is
its remarkably flat topography. Half the area that
surrounds Miami is less than five feet above sea level. Its
highest natural elevation, a limestone ridge that runs from Palm Beach to just
south of the city, averages a scant 12 feet. With just three feet of sea-level
rise, more than a third of southern Florida will vanish; at six feet, more than
half will be gone; if the seas rise 12 feet, South Florida will be little more
than an isolated archipelago surrounded by abandoned buildings and crumbling
overpasses. And the waters won’t just come in from the east – because the
region is so flat, rising seas will come in nearly as fast from the west too,
through the Everglades.
Even worse, South Florida sits above a vast and
porous limestone plateau. “Imagine Swiss cheese, and you’ll have a pretty good
idea what the rock under southern Florida looks like,” says Glenn Landers, a
senior engineer at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This means water moves
around easily – it seeps into yards at high tide, bubbles up on golf courses,
flows through underground caverns, corrodes building foundations from below.
“Conventional
sea walls and barriers are not effective here,” says
Robert Daoust, an ecologist at ARCADIS, a Dutch firm that specializes in
engineering solutions to rising seas.
Personally, I am not that concerned about a
potential Canary Island event creating a giant tsunami.
I am much, much more concerned about what would
happen if a giant meteor were to hit the Atlantic Ocean.
According to the University of California at Santa Cruz website,
if a giant meteor did slam into the Atlantic Ocean, it could potentially
produce a gigantic tsunami with a wall of water as high as 400 feet…
If an asteroid crashes into the Earth, it is
likely to splash down somewhere in the oceans that cover 70 percent of the
planet’s surface. Huge tsunami waves, spreading out from the impact site like
the ripples from a rock tossed into a pond, would inundate heavily populated
coastal areas.
A computer simulation of an asteroid impact
tsunami developed by scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz,
shows waves as high as 400 feet sweeping
onto the Atlantic Coast of the United States.
Could you imagine?
Today, about 10,000 major near earth objects have
been discovered by scientists, and approximately
10 percent of them are one kilometer or
larger in size.
At some point in the future, it is inevitable that
one of them is going to hit us.
And if one does splash down in the Atlantic, the
resulting tsunami could potentially kill millions upon millions of Americans.
Nobody talks about this much. And it is
almost too horrifying to think about the death and destruction that such an
event would cause.
But it will happen one day. Let’s just hope
that you are out of the way when it does.
Related Posts:
http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/east-coast-tsunami-if-it-happens-millions-of-americans-could-die
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