Hello Alexander,
nc>>>> https://bigthink.com/surprising-science/the-moon-is-insi
nc>>>> de-earth s-atmosphere-cl aims-study
ak>>> In this case we can also say that the Earth goes through
ak>>> the Sun atmosphere which is spread by the Solar wind. ;)
LL>> https://youtu.be/yIor3JgQCr8
LL>> How about a galactic wave hitting the Earth, and then the Sun,
LL>> reflected back, with the Sun going mini-nova, leaving the Earth
LL>> in cinders?
ak> We know little indeed.
We do know a cloud of cosmic dust is headed this way. What will
happen when it gets here is anybody's guess, but we do know what
happened in times past.
ak> For instance, the scientists cannot guarantee that the Earth itself will
not
ak> be a lava inferno in 2022.
The Earth could get smacked by an asteroid several miles in diameter
like in the movie "Sudden Impact", or any of a number of other
end of the world scenarios. But nobody seems to worry about those
kind of things. Except for chronic worry-warts.
ak> They know well that periodically the Earth gets twisted bowels, and its
all
ak> volcanoes begin erupting across the planet. Why? Nobody knows how these
ak> bows constructed and what we can expect.
Actually, volcano eruptions can be rated on a scale called the
volcanic explosivity index. It works kind of like the Richter
scale for volcanos.
The volcanic explosivity index is an eight-point gauge of the
amount of lava and ash they produce. This gives us an idea of
what we can expect.
Of course, if all the volcanoes in the world erupt at the same
time, all bets are off. In which case we can all safely say we
are doomed.
Anyway, this index measures the height to which the ash flies,
the duration of the eruption, and a number of other factors.
Here are some examples -
Nevada del Ruiz 3
SoufriŠre Hill 3
Pel‚e 4
Eyjafjallaj”kull 4
Vesuvius 5
St. Helens 5
Krakatoa 6
Tambora 7
That leaves us the 8s.
Coming soon, to your neighborhood, and mine, and everybody else's.
LL>> It has happened before, according to the mad scientist, noted
LL>> above, who claims we are due for an encore performance sometime
LL>> around 2020 to 2022.
"We're lucky we are in a period where the world hasn't seen
a `large' volcano." ~Kent
Yellowstone is a bigger threat to us than an asteroid impact.
And what do you think we can do to stop it from happening?
Capping a geyser like Old Faithful might actually trigger the
event rather than keep it from destoying us.
--Lee
--
I Take A Sheet In The Pool
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* Origin: news://eljaco.se (2:203/2)
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