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© (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2015.Island off southern Japan evacuated after volcano erupts
By Elaine Lies TOKYO©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
16 Comments
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gaijinpapa
Don't be surprised if there's a major earthquake soon. (no, i didn't get that from God, my crystal ball, or my own pet theory). Just a few too many things shaking around the place lately.
Have fun, enjoy life, but be prepared.
shakuji
Yes I could not agree more. Earthquakes from Nepal to San Jacinto CA, and steam at Hakone, this one blows, it makes one wonder if are we sitting on a powder keg?
Frederic Bastiat
It was at level 3 before. And as the article mentioned, it had erupted just last August as well.
UK9393
Good. No nuclear power plant restarts. On another road, I believe we are now entering a much more active, if not normal phase, of the earth's life. I think we have come to be and built or 'civilisation' during a relatively quiet epoch. Here comes normality.
nandakandamanda
Incredible footage here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=148&v=rTO3ZWOZSsU
Oh and 'dong' in the article must be there to represent the Japanese "Don!", which would more likely be "Thud" or "Thump" in English.
Quote: “There was a really loud, ‘dong’ sound of an explosion, and then black smoke rose, darkening the sky,” he told the national broadcaster NHK. “It smelled of sulfur.”
crustpunker
Volcanoes aren't thought to trigger earthquakes. If anything, there is a tiiiiinnny bit of possibility that earthquakes might have something to do with volcanic eruptions but even that is thought to be basically untrue.
Relax, have some dip. All shall be well.
WilliB
shakuji:
But we have always been sitting on a powder keg! The only difference is that now, with instant media, every shaker everywhere is immediately reported, and in connection with the human trait of "confirmation bias", anybody who wants to believe in disaster finds instant confirmation.
There is now doubt that there will be a catastrophic earthquake soon. Problem is that in geological terms, anything between now and tens of thousands of years is "soon".
nath
I don't always agree with what you say WillB, but you got that post entirely correct.
bigfujiyama
My dog looked at me in a funny way yesterday, a frog was heard to recite poetry in Manchester, and there is a butter shortage.
All the signs are there people. Big quake coming soon.
WilliB
bigfujiyama:
That also proves that 9/11 was conspiracy by the illuminati and that Elvis is alive. You have nailed the mechanics of conspiracy theories :-))
Jandworld
The smell of sulphur or vulcano belchs could be smelled this morning on Yakushima south side. Also ash fell here as is Kagoshima city quite used to.
One wonders why Kyushu has only 2%geothermal electrics. Since the 70s of the last century noone works on it.
smithinjapan
Jandworld: because that would cost the power companies money -- they want to put us all in danger by using a dangerous, outdated nuclear power plant. Notice how they're scrambling to say this shouldn't affect restart?
In any case, there was another news thread on this on another site talking about how one person is unaccounted for because he lived in the area "generally off limits". Perhaps this was the 72-year-old guy who got burned? Why on earth was someone allowed to live in an area off limits?
In any case, nothing we can do about this kind of thing except try and be as ready as you can be and get out of the way when it comes.
nandakandamanda
There are 47 relatively active volcanoes throughout Japan that have some kind of monitoring system placed on them. Five to ten of these will erupt, on average, per year, I just saw an J Meteorological Agency spokesman explaining on TV.
47 is close to the number of nuclear reactors here!!!
Monozuki
At any rate, volcanic eruptions have been making headlines these days. I don't mean to fuel fears of a next big one and such, but I think we'd better keep an eagle eye on associated phenomena down the road.
Anders Blenstrup-Pedersen
Jandworld +1, This is a huge waste of geothermal energy. Especially because most of the volcanoes explodes because of pressure from molten rock expanding because of heat, heavily cooling it with a high capacity geothermal power-plant might actually cool it enough to make it not erupt. That might actually save the country money.
Guy_Jean_Dailleult
It's very possible that all of the above statements are correct. Instant media makes people much more aware and gives the impression that disasters are increasing. But that also doesn't necessarily mean the impression is incorrect factually. Have seen a few articles where quake and volcano experts have floated the idea that what we thought of as normal was in fact a relatively quiet, short period in geological time, and that normal is actually much more active and violent. And that maybe we are returning to that normal level. True or not I have no idea, but it is food for thought to say the least.