RED ALERT! MELTDOWN CONFIRMED At Fukushima Nuclear Reactor

Hi Zoom:

In watching the news just a bit ago, they are pouring sea water into 3 plants to try and cool them down. That's the option of last resort, isn't it? If that doesn't work . . . .??? This is very, very bad.

ChannelNewsAsia.com Story

State of emergency at Japan's second nuclear plant: IAEA

Posted: 13 March 2011 2153 hrs

VIENNA : A state of emergency has been declared at a Japanese nuclear facility at Onagawa after excessive radiation levels were recorded there following a major earthquake, the UN atomic watchdog said on Sunday.
The situation in Japan is deteriorating fast and sources are saying the quake swarms are gathering like before the big one. When you see these people pumping in sea water, then you know all other 'controllable' avenues have already been taken. At some point these people run away and hope the reactor is contained by the concrete containment structures and when that fails, then OMG!!!!!

Terral
 
Last edited:
Hi Mad:

Well like I said in a previous post, the Japanese are gonna' downplay everything right up to the complete meltdown. Until the locals are allowed to go back to their homes I still think the situation remains critical.

Holy crap, man! These earth change events are just getting started. Another jolt and we could see a line of nuclear reactor dominoes dropping in Japan that could affect the west coast of the USA very quickly!

Nuclear Meltdown Fallout Map

This is just another component of what can easily lead the USA into Martial Law (topic). Hope for the best and prepare for the worst-case scenario.

Terral
 
Hi guys:

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DdQ8IVAz39Y"]HAARP Caused Japan Earthquake Benjamin Fulford[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRIuYxmeppY]Mirrored From Here[/ame]

You guys should be aware of the fact that the original video was removed almost immediately. I was able to track down one mirror site and downloaded the video to my channel, which is the first video above. The mirror is given in case Google/Youtube terminate my channel ... again ...

Somebody really does not want this info to get out. Download the video and upload to your channel, just in case.

Terral
 
Last edited:
Hi guys:

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ODNEqXctyU"]'Fukushima reports conflicting, Japan govt not in control'[/ame]

Every update on this situation draws a picture of things getting worse in Japan. When you see people pumping seawater into these reactors, then think China Syndrome.



When you hear about 'venting' then radioactive material is being released into the atmosphere.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ca4oWCgB15A"]Japan Quake, Nuclear Meltdown To Start World, USA Hyperinflation[/ame]

The unforeseen consequence of the disaster in Japan is how that leads to hyperinflation here in the USA.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-88nMROVzWE"]This Is Why We Prepare For The Worst[/ame]

Food, water and gas are in very short supply when the crap hits the fan. That is why we hope for the best and prepare for the worst.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xH31PkoK9yY"]This Is The Crap Hitting The Fan[/ame]

Look at all the aftershocks hitting Japan (link)!!! Or are these new quake swarms pointing to another big one?

Terral
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hi guys:

Asia Pacific News
State of emergency at second Japanese nuclear plant

Posted: 13 March 2011 2153 hrs

VIENNA: Excessive levels of radiation at a second Japanese nuclear facility after Friday's earthquake have led authorities to report a state of emergency there, the UN nuclear agency said.

"Japanese authorities have informed the IAEA that the first or lowest state of emergency at the Onagawa nuclear power plant has been reported by Tohoku Electric Power Company," the International Atomic Energy Agency said on Sunday.

The alert was declared "as a consequence of radioactivity readings exceeding allowed levels in the area surrounding the plant. Japanese authorities are investigating the source of radiation," the watchdog said in a statement.

It insisted however that, according to the authorities, the three reactor units at the Onagawa nuclear power plant "are under control."

In Japan, Tohoku Electric Power also denied that the radiation was caused by its reactors as the company monitored quite low levels of radioactivity readings at their exhaust.

"Temperatures at all of the reactors were below 100 C (212 degrees Fahrenheit)," the company said in a statement. "We have safely suspended our reactors."

In the first incident, part of a reactor at Japan's ageing Fukushima No. 1 atomic plant blew up on Saturday, a day after the biggest quake ever recorded in Japan unleashed a massive tsunami.

The IAEA said that venting of the damaged Onagawa reactor unit had started at 9:20 am in Japan "through a controlled release of vapour."

The operation was intended to lower pressure inside the reactor containment.

Following the failure of the high pressure injection system and other attempts at cooling the plant, the authorities had first injected water and then sea water into the unit.

"The authorities have informed the IAEA that accumulation of hydrogen is possible," the statement said.

The IAEA said it was continuing to "liaise with the Japanese authorities and is monitoring the situation as it evolves."

- AFP/ms/de

This is getting serious.

Terral
 
Hi guys:

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iUweRAjnCHA"]Disaster In Japan[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NH9FfhxqqCM]Six Nuclear Reactors Threaten Catastrophe! Volcano Shinmoedake Erupts![/ame]

The plot thickens ...

Terral
 
Last edited:
Hi guys:

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QwQKQ8_8qc"]3rd REACTOR set blow! Reactor #2.. no coolant on rods - fully exposed - 3/14, 2011[/ame]

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36XQ_Km94RY"]Canadian MSM - WARNING ABOUT FALLOUT in North America - March 14, 2011[/ame]

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_l1Kx9ulkc]Nuclea Alert: Fears of 3rd Explosion at Japan's Fukushima as cooling fails[/ame]

You people on the west coast of the USA and Canada had better head for the hills!!!

Terral
 
Last edited:
Hi guys:

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVCWGc173ic]Worst Nightmare? Nuclear meltdown threat as Fukushima fuel rods 'fully exposed'[/ame]

The situation in Japan keeps looking worse.

Terral
 
Two purposes: Panic Sells News and there is an Anti-Nuke Agenda on the left.

Here's a reality check:

...Before we respond with such panic, though, it would be useful to review exactly what is happening in Japan and what we have to fear from it.

The core of a nuclear reactor operates at about 550 degrees Fahrenheit, well below the temperature of a coal furnace and only slightly hotter than a kitchen oven. If anything unusual occurs, the control rods immediately drop, shutting off the nuclear reaction. You can't have a "runaway reactor," nor can a reactor explode like a nuclear bomb. A commercial reactor is to a bomb what Vaseline is to napalm. Although both are made from petroleum jelly, only one of them has potentially explosive material.

Once the reactor has shut down, there remains "decay heat" from traces of other radioactive isotopes. This can take more than a week to cool down, and the rods must be continually bathed in cooling waters to keep them from overheating.

On all Generation II reactors—the ones currently in operation—the cooling water is circulated by electric pumps. The new Generation III reactors such as the AP1000 have a simplified "passive" cooling system where the water circulates by natural convection with no pumping required.

If the pumps are knocked out in a Generation II reactor—as they were at Fukushima Daiichi by the tsunami—the water in the cooling system can overheat and evaporate. The resulting steam increases internal pressure that must be vented. There was a small release of radioactive steam at Three Mile Island in 1979, and there have also been a few releases at Fukushima Daiichi. These produce radiation at about the level of one dental X-ray in the immediate vicinity and quickly dissipate.

If the coolant continues to evaporate, the water level can fall below the level of the fuel rods, exposing them. This will cause a meltdown, meaning the fuel rods melt to the bottom of the steel pressure vessel.

Early speculation was that in a case like this the fuel might continue melting right through the steel and perhaps even through the concrete containment structure—the so-called China syndrome, where the fuel would melt all the way to China. But Three Mile Island proved this doesn't happen. The melted fuel rods simply aren't hot enough to melt steel or concrete.

The decay heat must still be absorbed, however, and as a last-ditch effort the emergency core cooling system can be activated to flood the entire containment structure with water. This will do considerable damage to the reactor but will prevent any further steam releases. The Japanese have now reportedly done this using seawater in at least two of the troubled reactors. These reactors will never be restarted.

None of this amounts to "another Chernobyl." The Chernobyl reactor had two crucial design flaws. First, it used graphite (carbon) instead of water to "moderate" the neutrons, which makes possible the nuclear reaction. The graphite caught fire in April 1986 and burned for four days. Water does not catch fire.

Second, Chernobyl had no containment structure. When the graphite caught fire, it spouted a plume of radioactive smoke that spread across the globe. A containment structure would have both smothered the fire and contained the radioactivity.

If a meltdown does occur in Japan, it will be a disaster for the Tokyo Electric Power Company but not for the general public. Whatever steam releases occur will have a negligible impact. Researchers have spent 30 years trying to find health effects from the steam releases at Three Mile Island and have come up with nothing. With all the death, devastation and disease now threatening tens of thousands in Japan, it is trivializing and almost obscene to spend so much time worrying about damage to a nuclear reactor....

William Tucker: Japan Does Not Face Another Chernobyl - WSJ.com
 
Hi dill:

What is the purpose of trying to get people to panic ?

These warnings are sent out to give people the opportunity TO PREPARE. Some of us headed for the hills starting March 1, 2011, because WE SEE THIS CRAP COMING and the crap is going to hit the fan! Yellowstone has been rumbling every day for a while now and suddenly went quiet. Let me say that again: Yellowstone has been seeing escalating earthquake/seismic activity for every damned day for a while now and suddenly everything stops! This area has been bulging ...

Yellowstone Has Bulged As Magma Pocket Swells - Conscious Ape

Yellowstone Volcano Bulging « Mountain Cat Geology

... and I am not making this stuff up. What does it mean that the earthquakes have stopped? Do you guys have any clues? I do: The volcano magma pressure is going off the charts, as the brown dwarf gets 2 million miles nearer our planet with each passing day. The entire Yellowstone caldera is super heating and the pressure is now equalizing throughout the entire region, which is lifting and separating the individual tectonic plate sections; so the magma is filling the cracks in between.

Lubricated friction points mean NO EARTHQUAKE ACTIVITY, but that also means the entire caldera is rising gradually with high points sinking down and low points rising up to find some sort of equilibrium. Then, the Earth rotates in the direction of the brown dwarf and the giant gets a better grip and BOOM the whole area erupts to relieve all the pressure in one gigantic 'event.'

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTS_vu519tI]Listen To Dutchsinse Warning About Yellowstone![/ame]

Terral
 
Two purposes: Panic Sells News and there is an Anti-Nuke Agenda on the left.

Here's a reality check:

...Before we respond with such panic, though, it would be useful to review exactly what is happening in Japan and what we have to fear from it.

The core of a nuclear reactor operates at about 550 degrees Fahrenheit, well below the temperature of a coal furnace and only slightly hotter than a kitchen oven. If anything unusual occurs, the control rods immediately drop, shutting off the nuclear reaction. You can't have a "runaway reactor," nor can a reactor explode like a nuclear bomb. A commercial reactor is to a bomb what Vaseline is to napalm. Although both are made from petroleum jelly, only one of them has potentially explosive material.

Once the reactor has shut down, there remains "decay heat" from traces of other radioactive isotopes. This can take more than a week to cool down, and the rods must be continually bathed in cooling waters to keep them from overheating.

On all Generation II reactors—the ones currently in operation—the cooling water is circulated by electric pumps. The new Generation III reactors such as the AP1000 have a simplified "passive" cooling system where the water circulates by natural convection with no pumping required.

If the pumps are knocked out in a Generation II reactor—as they were at Fukushima Daiichi by the tsunami—the water in the cooling system can overheat and evaporate. The resulting steam increases internal pressure that must be vented. There was a small release of radioactive steam at Three Mile Island in 1979, and there have also been a few releases at Fukushima Daiichi. These produce radiation at about the level of one dental X-ray in the immediate vicinity and quickly dissipate.

If the coolant continues to evaporate, the water level can fall below the level of the fuel rods, exposing them. This will cause a meltdown, meaning the fuel rods melt to the bottom of the steel pressure vessel.

Early speculation was that in a case like this the fuel might continue melting right through the steel and perhaps even through the concrete containment structure—the so-called China syndrome, where the fuel would melt all the way to China. But Three Mile Island proved this doesn't happen. The melted fuel rods simply aren't hot enough to melt steel or concrete.

The decay heat must still be absorbed, however, and as a last-ditch effort the emergency core cooling system can be activated to flood the entire containment structure with water. This will do considerable damage to the reactor but will prevent any further steam releases. The Japanese have now reportedly done this using seawater in at least two of the troubled reactors. These reactors will never be restarted.

None of this amounts to "another Chernobyl." The Chernobyl reactor had two crucial design flaws. First, it used graphite (carbon) instead of water to "moderate" the neutrons, which makes possible the nuclear reaction. The graphite caught fire in April 1986 and burned for four days. Water does not catch fire.

Second, Chernobyl had no containment structure. When the graphite caught fire, it spouted a plume of radioactive smoke that spread across the globe. A containment structure would have both smothered the fire and contained the radioactivity.

If a meltdown does occur in Japan, it will be a disaster for the Tokyo Electric Power Company but not for the general public. Whatever steam releases occur will have a negligible impact. Researchers have spent 30 years trying to find health effects from the steam releases at Three Mile Island and have come up with nothing. With all the death, devastation and disease now threatening tens of thousands in Japan, it is trivializing and almost obscene to spend so much time worrying about damage to a nuclear reactor....

William Tucker: Japan Does Not Face Another Chernobyl - WSJ.com


It seems that fears of a meltdown are very real, this is not a small inconsequential little problem. Thousands dead already, and if these plants can't be cooled and the radiation contained the potential for even greater death is very real.
There is talk of reactor #3 using MOX fuel that is even more dangerous. The situation as of now looks very bad and the potential for even greater illness and death from the nuclear reactors melting down and loss of containment is cause of great concern.

“Tokyo Electric Power Company’s (Tepco’s) Fukushima I unit 3 is set to become the third Japanese nuclear reactor to load mixed oxide (MOX) fuel after receiving approval from the governor of Fukushima Prefecture, Yukei Sato.”

world nuclear news japan mox fuel - Google Search


How is Mox fuel different then uranium? The BBC has also confirmed that Mox Fuel has been used in reactor #3!
In the meantime, there have been suggestions that an incident at reactor 3 would inherently be more dangerous than at reactors 1 and 2 because it burns “mixed oxide fuel” (MOX) containing plutonium.
Plutonium is produced during nuclear fission, so is present in all reactor cores – the longer the fuel has been there, the more plutonium will be present, up to about 1%.
In some countries, spent fuel rods are re-processed and the plutonium set to one side.
However, Japan – in an attempt to be more frugal with a valuable resource – has a programme that mixes the plutonium coming out of the re-processing facility back into new fuel rods that also contain uranium. This is MOX fuel.


BBC News - Struggle to stabilise Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant

Shaun Burnie, an independent nuclear energy consultant and former head of nuclear campaigns at Greenpeace, said the presence of a percentage of fuel core loaded with plutonium Mox fuel in the No 3 reactor posed a grave threat to the surrounding area.

“Plutonium Mox fuel increases the risk of nuclear accident due the neutronic effects of plutonium on the reactor,” Burnie told the Guardian. “In the event of an accident – in particular loss of coolant – the reactor core is more difficult to control due to both neutronics and higher risk of fuel cladding failure. In the event of the fuel melting and the release of plutonium fuel into the environment, the health hazards are greater, including higher levels of latent cancer.”
 
Hi dill:

What is the purpose of trying to get people to panic ?

These warnings are sent out to give people the opportunity TO PREPARE. Some of us headed for the hills starting March 1, 2011, because WE SEE THIS CRAP COMING and the crap is going to hit the fan! Yellowstone has been rumbling every day for a while now and suddenly went quiet. Let me say that again: Yellowstone has been seeing escalating earthquake/seismic activity for every damned day for a while now and suddenly everything stops! This area has been bulging ...

Yellowstone Has Bulged As Magma Pocket Swells - Conscious Ape

Yellowstone Volcano Bulging « Mountain Cat Geology

... and I am not making this stuff up. What does it mean that the earthquakes have stopped? Do you guys have any clues? I do: The volcano magma pressure is going off the charts, as the brown dwarf gets 2 million miles nearer our planet with each passing day. The entire Yellowstone caldera is super heating and the pressure is now equalizing throughout the entire region, which is lifting and separating the individual tectonic plate sections; so the magma is filling the cracks in between.

Lubricated friction points mean NO EARTHQUAKE ACTIVITY, but that also means the entire caldera is rising gradually with high points sinking down and low points rising up to find some sort of equilibrium. Then, the Earth rotates in the direction of the brown dwarf and the giant gets a better grip and BOOM the whole area erupts to relieve all the pressure in one gigantic 'event.'

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTS_vu519tI]Listen To Dutchsinse Warning About Yellowstone![/ame]

Terral

Do you need a lot of people to survive this catastrophy or do you think y'all have enough people up in "the hills" to carry on without the ones who just don't feel like going to all that trouble ?
 
Terral isn't posting about a planet from the far reaches of the solar system that MAY slam into us. He's posting about a real, potentially deadly situation that could affect millions of people beyond Japans borders.

Yeah, Terral may deserve ridicule for other posts he's made but not these.

I've been monitoring other boards that have members that are actually living in Japan and experiencing these disasters first hand and they really haven't been saying anything different than what Terral has posted.

Like I said in a different post, The Japanese have a different crisis mentality than we do. They will say every thing's under control right up to the massive explosion and China Syndrome meltdown.

How will we know when the potential for danger has passed and they're in the clear? When they start letting people go back to what is left of their homes over there.
 
Two purposes: Panic Sells News and there is an Anti-Nuke Agenda on the left.

Here's a reality check:

...Before we respond with such panic, though, it would be useful to review exactly what is happening in Japan and what we have to fear from it.

The core of a nuclear reactor operates at about 550 degrees Fahrenheit, well below the temperature of a coal furnace and only slightly hotter than a kitchen oven. If anything unusual occurs, the control rods immediately drop, shutting off the nuclear reaction. You can't have a "runaway reactor," nor can a reactor explode like a nuclear bomb. A commercial reactor is to a bomb what Vaseline is to napalm. Although both are made from petroleum jelly, only one of them has potentially explosive material.

Once the reactor has shut down, there remains "decay heat" from traces of other radioactive isotopes. This can take more than a week to cool down, and the rods must be continually bathed in cooling waters to keep them from overheating.

On all Generation II reactors—the ones currently in operation—the cooling water is circulated by electric pumps. The new Generation III reactors such as the AP1000 have a simplified "passive" cooling system where the water circulates by natural convection with no pumping required.

If the pumps are knocked out in a Generation II reactor—as they were at Fukushima Daiichi by the tsunami—the water in the cooling system can overheat and evaporate. The resulting steam increases internal pressure that must be vented. There was a small release of radioactive steam at Three Mile Island in 1979, and there have also been a few releases at Fukushima Daiichi. These produce radiation at about the level of one dental X-ray in the immediate vicinity and quickly dissipate.

If the coolant continues to evaporate, the water level can fall below the level of the fuel rods, exposing them. This will cause a meltdown, meaning the fuel rods melt to the bottom of the steel pressure vessel.

Early speculation was that in a case like this the fuel might continue melting right through the steel and perhaps even through the concrete containment structure—the so-called China syndrome, where the fuel would melt all the way to China. But Three Mile Island proved this doesn't happen. The melted fuel rods simply aren't hot enough to melt steel or concrete.

The decay heat must still be absorbed, however, and as a last-ditch effort the emergency core cooling system can be activated to flood the entire containment structure with water. This will do considerable damage to the reactor but will prevent any further steam releases. The Japanese have now reportedly done this using seawater in at least two of the troubled reactors. These reactors will never be restarted.

None of this amounts to "another Chernobyl." The Chernobyl reactor had two crucial design flaws. First, it used graphite (carbon) instead of water to "moderate" the neutrons, which makes possible the nuclear reaction. The graphite caught fire in April 1986 and burned for four days. Water does not catch fire.

Second, Chernobyl had no containment structure. When the graphite caught fire, it spouted a plume of radioactive smoke that spread across the globe. A containment structure would have both smothered the fire and contained the radioactivity.

If a meltdown does occur in Japan, it will be a disaster for the Tokyo Electric Power Company but not for the general public. Whatever steam releases occur will have a negligible impact. Researchers have spent 30 years trying to find health effects from the steam releases at Three Mile Island and have come up with nothing. With all the death, devastation and disease now threatening tens of thousands in Japan, it is trivializing and almost obscene to spend so much time worrying about damage to a nuclear reactor....

William Tucker: Japan Does Not Face Another Chernobyl - WSJ.com


It seems that fears of a meltdown are very real, this is not a small inconsequential little problem. Thousands dead already, and if these plants can't be cooled and the radiation contained the potential for even greater death is very real.
There is talk of reactor #3 using MOX fuel that is even more dangerous. The situation as of now looks very bad and the potential for even greater illness and death from the nuclear reactors melting down and loss of containment is cause of great concern.

“Tokyo Electric Power Company’s (Tepco’s) Fukushima I unit 3 is set to become the third Japanese nuclear reactor to load mixed oxide (MOX) fuel after receiving approval from the governor of Fukushima Prefecture, Yukei Sato.”

world nuclear news japan mox fuel - Google Search


How is Mox fuel different then uranium? The BBC has also confirmed that Mox Fuel has been used in reactor #3!
In the meantime, there have been suggestions that an incident at reactor 3 would inherently be more dangerous than at reactors 1 and 2 because it burns “mixed oxide fuel” (MOX) containing plutonium.
Plutonium is produced during nuclear fission, so is present in all reactor cores – the longer the fuel has been there, the more plutonium will be present, up to about 1%.
In some countries, spent fuel rods are re-processed and the plutonium set to one side.
However, Japan – in an attempt to be more frugal with a valuable resource – has a programme that mixes the plutonium coming out of the re-processing facility back into new fuel rods that also contain uranium. This is MOX fuel.


BBC News - Struggle to stabilise Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant

Shaun Burnie, an independent nuclear energy consultant and former head of nuclear campaigns at Greenpeace, said the presence of a percentage of fuel core loaded with plutonium Mox fuel in the No 3 reactor posed a grave threat to the surrounding area.

“Plutonium Mox fuel increases the risk of nuclear accident due the neutronic effects of plutonium on the reactor,” Burnie told the Guardian. “In the event of an accident – in particular loss of coolant – the reactor core is more difficult to control due to both neutronics and higher risk of fuel cladding failure. In the event of the fuel melting and the release of plutonium fuel into the environment, the health hazards are greater, including higher levels of latent cancer.”




The "thousands dead" are due to the earthquake and the tsumani, not due to anything having to do with the nuclear power plants.

Get a grip.
 
Terral isn't posting about a planet from the far reaches of the solar system that MAY slam into us. He's posting about a real, potentially deadly situation that could affect millions of people beyond Japans borders.

Yeah, Terral may deserve ridicule for other posts he's made but not these.

I've been monitoring other boards that have members that are actually living in Japan and experiencing these disasters first hand and they really haven't been saying anything different than what Terral has posted.

Like I said in a different post, The Japanese have a different crisis mentality than we do. They will say every thing's under control right up to the massive explosion and China Syndrome meltdown.

How will we know when the potential for danger has passed and they're in the clear? When they start letting people go back to what is left of their homes over there.

I have no problem with his posts. I'm asking if he really wants people to head for the hills in light of what could possibly happen. A mass exodus isn't really the safest thing in practice either as evidence by the evacuation for Rita.
 
The "thousands dead" are due to the earthquake and the tsumani, not due to anything having to do with the nuclear power plants.

Get a grip.

There have also been many casulties associated with the appearance of a Giant Lizard walking upright toward Tokyo!!!!

godzilla1.jpg
 
Hi Boe:

All we need is somebody trying to play down the serious nature of what is going on here:

The "thousands dead" are due to the earthquake and the tsumani, not due to anything having to do with the nuclear power plants.

Get a grip.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCfvTG5F8h4&feature=watch_response]JAPAN NUKE REACTOR NUMBER 3 MASSIVE EXPLOSION MARCH 14, 2011[/ame]

Let's see: We have a 8.9-9.0 earthquake, volcanoes going off, a tsunami and now multiple nuclear reactors have exploded. Here is a news flash for ya: These radioactive clouds are making their way to the USA and Canada and nobody knows how many people the radioactive part of the disaster equation will injure and kill in the future. Wisdom says to hope for the best and prepare for the worst-case scenario and that does not mean to minimize the seriousness of the situation.

The quake swarms are building up again like before the big quake in Japan and the train is trying to leave the tracks already without more earthquakes. Everyone on the west coast of the USA and Canada should be watching this story on high alert! Make no mistake about it.

Terral
 

Forum List

Back
Top