Survivalism »

SWAT Team Storms Private Bunker

May 10, 2012 – 1:39 pm | 3 Comments

The anti-survivalist actions of some authorities in the USA are getting much worse. In recent times we have seen the malicious use of zoning laws to thwart survival plans, and we have seen many of things survivalists do listed as suspicious (in a terrorism way). This most recent news is of special concern for anyone who has a private bunker:
After getting dressed Mr. Del Rio went and opened his front door. He was immediately bum rushed by the Austin Police Department’s SWAT Team and then detained and interrogated for over 10 hours.
His crime: on his property was an old Cold War bunker that Mr. Del Rio had converted into a workshop.
You’d think the interrogation would have been enough punishment, but unfortunately the authorities:

fenced off his home and prohibited him from entering the residence
filled in his entire basement and bunker with 264 tons of concrete
sent him a bill for $90,000 in …

Read the full story »
Bunkers

From DIY to Russian megabunkers

Survivalism

Preparing for when the SHTF

Pole Shift

Crustal displacements and magnetic pole shift – both are scary

Comets

Don’t believe NASA – these are a genuine threat

Earthquakes

More likely during eclipses and perhaps Comet Elenin is a factor?

Home » Asteroids, Tsunami

Asteroid Tsunamis Not So Bad After All?

Submitted by Robert Bast on April 28, 2009 – 7:36 amOne Comment

A new computer simulation has determined that if a 200 metre wide asteroid lands in the ocean, where the water depth is 5 kilometres, the following will occur:

  • Initial tsunami with a height of hundreds of metres
  • The height of the waves makes them prone to collapse, and they start breaking immediately
  • After they are 30 kilometres from the impact site, they have shrunk to a height of less than 60 metres
  • Extrapolating the shrinkage suggests a height of less than 10 metres after it has travelled 1000 kilometres

Ultimately, how close to the shore the impact is would make a big difference…

Although 10 metres would ordinarily mean massive devastation, apparently the wavelength would be shorter (2 minutes), and therefore not as damaging as regular tsunamis (8 minutes). The results of another simulation “suggest much slower wave decay”, ie worse.

The article concludes with something we all, perhaps, should keep in the back of our mind:

Brian Toon of the Universityof Colorado in Boulder says we should continue surveying for asteroids. “We probably have quite a while before we’re going to get hit by a significantly sized [asteroid],” he says. “But nevertheless one of these is going to come at us.”

Free eBook - 2012 Facts and Myths - by Robert Bast. Don't Be Deceived!

One Comment »

  • Carl says:

    Based on the fact that the Pacific, the largest and deepest ocean on the planet has an average depth of 13,215 feet (4400 metres)this would mean that the majority of this same expanse of water would be a great deal shallower. The same could be said for the remaining 4 oceans. Why then would anyone base a calculation on 200m asteroid landing in water 5 kilometers deep??

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.