Likewise, over the years, scientists have been mixed on the effects of possible relationships between
the melting ice cap, earthquakes, tsunamis and even land and underwater volcanic activity.
Keita's article is specifically about 3 nuclear reactors in Fukushima, Japan which were destroyed
by earthquakes and tsunami and one remaining reactor is dangerously and critically damaged. ---- Scientists in Japan fear another earthquake or tsunami which may lead to catastrophe for this last reactor.
Your article speaks of the melting ice cap and a future catastrophe.....predicted 5,000 years from now.
But, some scientists do attest that there is even a small correlation between
the melting ice cap, earthquakes, tsunamis, and/or volcanic eruptions and the predicted
world-wide flooding.
So, there just may be such a connection between the melting ice cap and the nuclear reactor in Japan......if somehow the the melting ice has some kind of affect on
earthquakes, tsunamis and/or volcanic eruptions which have all plagued that land mass.
However, some of us need not worry because we follow God's Word that "
It won't be water but fire next time."
Shockwaves from melting icecaps are triggering earthquakes, say scientists
Saturday 08 September 2007
Could recent earthquakes be linked to melting glaciers?
Mar 17, 2011
Katla volcano (Iceland): earthquake swarm under icecap
Thursday Jun 07, 2012
September 21, 2012, 2:24 pm
Greenland’s ‘Ice Quakes’ May Set a Record
Climate Change And Tsunamis: Ice Melt May Cause Underwater Avalanches, Research Shows
Posted: 08/16/2013
If melting ice caps trigger rapid sea level rise, the strain that the edges of continents could experience might set off underwater landslides, new research suggests.
Submarine landslides happen on every continental margin, the underwater parts of continental plates bordering oceanic plates. These underwater avalanches, which can happen when underwater slopes get hit by earthquakes or otherwise have too much weight loaded onto them, can generate dangerous tsunamis.
A staggering half of all the Earth moved by submarine landslides over the past 125,000 years apparently happened between 8,000 and 15,000 years ago. "This time period coincides with the period of most rapid sea level rise following the end of the last ice age," said study co-author Daniel Brothers, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey's Coastal and Marine Science Center in Woods Hole, Mass. [10 Tsunamis That Changed History]
....CONTINUED HERE: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/16/climate-change-tsunamis_n_3769200.html