Page added on May 3, 2016
All over the world seismic activity is increasing.
In recent weeks we have seen a dramatic earthquake in Ecuador, more than 600 earthquakes have experts extremely alarmed about what is happening to Japan’s southern Island, and 37 volcanoes around the planet are erupting right now. Most of the large earthquakes and volcanic eruptions that we have witnessed lately have come along the Ring of Fire, which is an area of seismic instability which roughly encircles the Pacific Ocean. Fortunately the west coast of the United States has been spared so far, but scientists tell us that tension has been building up along the San Andreas fault and the Cascadia Subduction Zone for decades, and they assure us that it is only a matter of time before we see a major event. What that day arrives, will you be prepared?
There were a couple of notable seismic events which took place on Monday. First of all, the largest volcano in Russia’s Far East known as Klyuchevskaya Sopka violently erupted. Steaming hot ash was shot more than three miles up into the air, but fortunately it is not a heavily populated area. This represents yet another major volcanic eruption along the Ring of Fire, and this has some scientists extremely concerned about what may be coming next.
Here in the United States, an unusual swarm of 21 earthquakes along the Arizona-Nevada border is also raising eyebrows…
More small earthquakes shook northwest Arizona Sunday adding to the list of temblors that have struck the area since March 29.
The Arizona Geological Survey said two quakes occurred, including a magnitude 2.6 quake at 12:07 a.m.
There has been a swarm of 21 quakes in an area along the Arizona-Nevada line south-southwest of Littlefield, AZ, which is also close to southwestern Utah and the frequency and span puzzles geologists.
The good news is that we have not had a truly historic earthquake in the U.S. for decades, and there have been no major volcanic eruptions since Mount St. Helens exploded back in 1980.
But scientists assure us that we are living on borrowed time, and there are three extremely dangerous volcanoes in North America that I am keeping a close watch on right now…
#1 Mt. Popocatepetl
Popocatepetl is an Aztec word that can be translated as “smoking mountain”, and more than 25 million people live within range of this extraordinarily dangerous mountain. Experts tell us that during the time of the Aztecs, entire cities were completely buried in super-heated mud from this volcano. In fact, the super-heated mud was so deep that it buried entire pyramids. In the event of a full-blown eruption, Mexico City’s 18 million residents probably wouldn’t be buried in super-heated mud, but it would still be absolutely devastating for Mexico’s largest city.
#2 Mt. Rainier
Mt. Rainier has been dubbed a “time bomb“, “the most dangerous mountain in the United States” and “one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world” because it sits so close to Seattle, Tacoma and other major cities along the coast of Washington state. In the event of a full-blown eruption, countless numbers of people would literally be buried alive in a tsunami of super-heated mud. These tsunamis of super-heated mud are known as “lahars”, and scientists believe that Mt. Rainier is capable of producing lahars that could move at speeds of up to 50 miles per hour. I am so convinced that an eruption of Mt. Rainier is in our future that I even put one in my novel.
#3 The Yellowstone Supervolcano
Many of us that are a bit older still remember the eruption of Mount St. Helens back in 1980. Well, scientists tell us that a full-blown eruption of the Yellowstone supervolcano would have up to 2,000 times the power of that eruption. Salt Lake City would be toast, anything caught outside in Denver would probably be dead in pretty short order, and a layer of volcanic ash at least 10 feet deep would be dumped on everything even up to 1,000 miles away. Food production in America would be virtually wiped out, and a “volcanic winter” would cool global temperatures by up to 20 degrees for an extended period of time.
In other words, life as we know it would come to an end.
That is why the extremely unusual activity going on at Yellowstone right now is such a concern. If it decides to blow, world history will make a dramatic turn in a single moment.
So what should we do?
As always, we should never give in to fear. There are definitely going to be major earthquakes and historic volcanic eruptions in North America, and we are going to have to deal with them. Doing some common sense things in advance will give you and your family the best chance of calmly and smoothly making it through such a crisis.
Below, I have shared some tips that come directly from the CDC. This first set of tips suggests things that you and your family can do to get prepared for a major earthquake…
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Stock up now on emergency supplies that can be used after an earthquake. These supplies should include a first aid kit, survival kits for the home, automobile, and workplace, and emergency water and food. Store enough supplies to last at least 3 days.
If an earthquake occurs, you may need to evacuate a damaged area afterward. By planning and practicing for evacuation, you will be better prepared to respond appropriately and efficiently to signs of danger or to directions by civil authorities.
Take time before an earthquake strikes to write an emergency priority list, including:
Make a list of important information and put it in a secure location. Include on your list:
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Preparing for a volcanic eruption requires a strategy that is a little bit different. Here are more tips from the CDC…
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Follow authorities’ instructions if they tell you to leave the area. Though it may seem safe to stay at home and wait out an eruption, doing so could be very dangerous. Volcanoes spew hot, dangerous gases, ash, lava, and rock that are powerfully destructive.
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In the end, you have got to do what you feel is best for you and your family.
Personally, I would be extremely hesitant to live in very high risk areas along the west coast or near the Yellowstone supervolcano. This is especially true considering how dramatically global seismic activity is increasing.
But others point to the fact that these “danger areas” have not seen any major events in decades, so they wonder what all of the fuss is about.
16 Comments on "How To Get Prepared For The Coming Earthquakes And Volcanic Eruptions"
Makati1 on Tue, 3rd May 2016 9:11 pm
Shakin’ and bakin’! Mother Nature is only getting started with her plans to revamp the earth’s ecology along a new path. As I mentioned previously, the deeper ocean is placing new weight on areas that have not seen it in millenia or even millions of years. The melting ice is removing weight from other areas causing an uplift of the plates. Like a weighing balance, the swings will happen until it evens out again. Since the ice melt and increasing ocean depth is going to continue through the rest of our lifetimes, we can expect more and more of these “adjustments” all over the world. Many major faults are very overdue for release. I suspect we will get to see those events in the not too distant future. We shall see. Yellowstone anyone? If you want a picture of possibilities, you can watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4AjQvOWUJ2o “Supervolcano” or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kc7pJ8f1aY “The New Madrid Faultline Documentary”.
Pass the popcorn. The show is getting better and better.
Apneaman on Tue, 3rd May 2016 9:49 pm
Michael Snyder is a shit for brains, Jesus freak retard and a con artist.
Climate change will shake the Earth
A changing climate isn’t just about floods, droughts and heatwaves. It brings erupting volcanoes and catastrophic earthquakes too
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2012/feb/26/why-climate-change-shake-earth
Earthquake Time Bombs!
http://www.ecoshock.info/2016/04/earthquake-time-bombs.html
Hey, Michael. What if some guy feels the best thing to do for him and his family is to shoot you in the fucking head? Should he still do what he feels is best? I “feel” he should, but that’s just me.
surf on Tue, 3rd May 2016 10:18 pm
“more than 600 earthquakes have experts extremely alarmed about what is happening to Japan’s southern Island, and 37 volcanoes around the planet are erupting right now.”
Sorry, in a typical year 50 to 60 volcanoes erupt and there are on average 20,000 earthquakes per year with with about 16 of those being large. none of the information about earthquakes and volcanoes in this article is unusual or alarming.
Makati1 on Wed, 4th May 2016 12:38 am
surf, the year ain’t over, or haven’t you a calendar? It only takes one to end it all for humanity. The importance is WHERE those volcanoes are and those earthquakes. Numbers are meaningless without perspective. Have you checked out the locations? Maybe you should, before you poo-poo someone else’ info.
If the New Madrid Fault lets lose and splits the Us in half with a new inland sea covering the Midwest, would that not be important? After all, by your accounts, it is “only one” quake. Krakatoa was “only one” eruption. The San Andreas dropping most of the West Coast into the ocean would be “only one” quake. Yellowstone would be “only one” eruption.
We get hundreds of quakes a year here in Manila, but few are big enough to even feel. Does that mean there are no big ones coming? If that is so, why do the building codes require a level 7 or higher design? I live on the Ring of Fire. I watch such things closely. Things, they are ah changing…
basil_hayden on Wed, 4th May 2016 4:34 am
Ran out of oily stuff to freak about?
makati1 on Wed, 4th May 2016 6:20 am
basil, oily stuff is the cause behind all of the problems that are aired here. The world is a very complex place and there are no “separate” topics not connected to oil in one way or another.
Davy on Wed, 4th May 2016 7:10 am
Nothing wrong with preparing for natural events like this article talks about. What is wrong is misleading people into thinking this is what they have to fear. What they should be fearing is the knowns not the unknowns of geology or astro-physics. Will a super volcano hit or an asteroid? Maybe but these are sensational events we like to make movies about. What is more insidious and slowly creeping up on us is our own systematic failure as a modern civilization. A civilization that chooses to continue a narrative of growth and progress. A civilization that wants to stress exceptionalism of our species when the contrary is true. A civilization collapsing under our feet.
Risk management and preparations are common themes for all types of occurrences. What is more important is knowing what the most pressing issues are. In our case it is our systematic failure as a civilization. This is a known and it is a process. We are denying know danger and we are ignoring the time dependent importance of mitigating and adapting to a collapsing support system.
If these natural disaster hit our civilization will collapse if large enough. Even smaller natural disaster events will increasingly not be recoverable. If the big one hits the west coast we are soon not going to have the money or resources to recover these areas. Prepare for what is known and that is the end of the status quo.
ghung on Wed, 4th May 2016 7:43 am
I generally enjoy Snyder’s Chicken Little articles, and it’s always possible that Chicken Little gets vaporised by a meteorite or falling space debris at some point. Going to happen somewhere, to someone, at some point, but what gets me is how many folks aren’t prepared for anything. More evidence for that than that the ring of fire is going to cut loose everywhere in the next year or two. Year after year we see stories of hurricanes, tornadoes, etc. where people apparently assumed they weren’t the ones who were going to get it this time.
Who lives in tornado alley and doesn’t have some sort of shelter? Who doesn’t keep a couple of cases of bottled water, food, batteries, etc. on hand when they’ve been told days in advance that a storm is coming? Too many people; generally the same ones in denial (or ignorance) of all the shit coming down the pipe for humanity; global warming/climate change, economic contraction, political failures, rising relative costs of most things that matter……
Maybe it’s just me; a bit over-prepared perhaps. At least I never run out of ketchup.
Davy on Wed, 4th May 2016 7:46 am
WorldRiskReport 2015
http://www.worldriskreport.org/fileadmin/WRB/PDFs_und_Tabellen/WRR_2015_engl_online.pdf
Where is the highest disaster risk in the world? In other words, where do natural hazards coincide with a vulnerable society?
Rank Country Risk (%)
1. Vanuatu 36.72
2. Tonga 28.45
3. Philippines 27.98
Davy on Wed, 4th May 2016 7:51 am
WorldRiskReport 2014
http://www.worldriskreport.org/fileadmin/WRB/PDFs_und_Tabellen/WorldRiskReport_2014_online.pdf
“The WorldRiskIndex examines the risk of becoming the victim of a disaster resulting from an extreme natural event for every country worldwide. Risk comprises exposure to natural hazards and the vulnerability of a society. In this year’s edition of the WorldRiskReport the modular structure of the WorldRiskIndex has been adjusted to focus on risk in urban areas.”
Rank Country Risk (%)
1. Vanuatu 36.50
2. Philippines 28.25
Ralph on Wed, 4th May 2016 8:34 am
A few months ago a man in India become the first in recorded history to be killed by meteorite strike. Probably not the first to be killed, just the first to be recorded, although there are now 7 billion targets, more than ever before.
paulo1 on Wed, 4th May 2016 9:10 am
Apnea,
I busted my gut with your post.
I think Snyder is going to wind himself into a little knot of anxiety if he doesn’t back away from this nonsense. I suppose his form of blogging provides a living and he is running out of topics?
Where I live the concern is the inevitable Cascadia subduction zone quake, we refer to as ‘the big one’. I pissed my wife off last week when I came in the house all worried looking and said, “When ‘the big one’ hits I just hope I won’t have to restack my woodsheds. I won’t mind rebuilding the house, but the wood piles….”
Davy on Wed, 4th May 2016 9:58 am
I do think our forcing the climate with the resulting global temp increases is going to force the geology. This is little different from the geological forcing and response we have seen post glaciation. This is naturally a much longer time scale than our goofy human brains care to register Nonetheless, it is likely our climate forcing is going to activate the geology under our feet causing activity that otherwise may have been less prone to immediate activity. I suspect earthquakes and massive ones are in our cards along with all the other collapse issues we discuss here daily.
Hawkcreek on Wed, 4th May 2016 11:54 am
Let me see, I can’t live near a volcano, earthquake zone, and near or downwind of, a major city or military target.
Maybe I can color code a map or something by “fear” quotient.
We might all have to move to Canada!
At least we would have free health care.
penury on Wed, 4th May 2016 1:04 pm
Well I for one prefer to live my life day by day. Statistics show that 99 per cent of the things we worry about never happen, Of the ones that do happen 90 per cent of them are unpreventable and unpredictable. So people out of the hundreds of things there is to worry about, pick the one that is going to happen that you have any control over, and concentrate your worry on that. Yes, you will get old and die, if you live that long.
makati1 on Wed, 4th May 2016 6:43 pm
penury, I share your outlook. I only worry about the things I can control. They are few. I enjoy life and let the rest of the world take care of itself. That is a kind of freedom few Americas ever enjoy because they are too busy wading thru all of the fears and problems the US MSM and Police State throws at them to keep them afraid and dependent on the government for ‘security’.
Yep! We ALL die. Some when they are born. Some in mid life because of bad choices. A few at a ‘ripe old age’. It is the only definite in life. Make your peace with death and gain a freedom to live your life that most never enjoy. Throw out the idea of ‘a life after’ and you can live your present (and only) life with a totally different outlook. Freeing you to actually live, not be indentured to some sky god who dictates your life and probably your income. Religion has NEVER improved the world, nor changed human greed, sex or hate. It has only made the ‘priests’ wealthy and powerful. It took 58 years until I realized this and threw off the chains. I am free.