The Coming, Building Geophysical Upheaval
The recent M8.8 earthquake just off the coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula in far eastern Russia is very significant. While it occurred on the far western side of the Pacific Ocean; in geological terms, it occurred where the Pacific and North American tectonic plates meet. Yes! The North American tectonic plate extends up and around the Pacific plate to eastern Siberia and down to northern Japan. Geologically, northern Japan and eastern Siberia are part of the North American tectonic plate.
Anyway, the M8.8 Kamchatka earthquake of recent weeks demonstrated the tremendous tension that has built up between the Pacific and North American tectonic plates. Now that the plates have powerfully slipped on their far western boundary, it only makes sense that a powerful release is also coming on the other side of the Pacific plate, along the West Coast of North America.
Could there be an M8.8 earthquake on the West Coast of North America?
Sure, there is plentiful geological evidence of that in the past. In that vein, in recent months many people have been having deep dreams and visions of near future geological upheaval in California, for instance. An M8.8 earthquake, or M9+, in cities like Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles or San Diego would be catastrophic, with immense property and infrastructure destruction and loss of life. Evidently those sorts of apocalyptic events are in the pipeline - - geologists are warning that the San Andreas and Cascadia faults are locked and loaded, and prone to suddenly move at any time.
What About Ecuador?
Ecuador is also on the eastern side of the Pacific Ocean, and part of the Ring of Fire. There are a lot of fault lines in Ecuador, and just out to sea off the coast. Ecuador does occasionally have M8+ earthquakes, every century or so.
We fervently intend to be in another province when/if that happens, though I was in Quito, at 9,300 ft. of elevation, when a big M7.8 shaker hit the coast of Ecuador in 2016. That quake knocked a lot of buildings down over on the Pacific coast, and killed and injured hordes of people.
Though the epicenter of that earthquake was about 90 miles away as the crow flies, EVERYTHING WAS ROCKING AND ROLLING in Quito, way up in the mountains. I ran out into the street! The granitic bedrock of the Andes was under tremendous tectonic strain, and emitted a lot of electromagnetic energy straight to the atmosphere, which briefly lit up the nighttime sky like a huge, fluorescent, neon light - - the archetypical “earthquake lights,” for which the Andes are known.
In 1797 there was an estimated M7.6 to M8.3 earthquake in Ecuador’s central Andean Corridor that wiped out the small town of Riobamba. Were that same quake to occur today, it would devastate the now much larger city of 177,000 people, as well as other towns for miles around.
More recently, in 1906 there was an M8.8 earthquake just off the coast of Esmeraldas, in far northwestern Ecuador. The population of Ecuador was very small at that time, but the coastal, capital city of Esmeraldas Province now has a highly vulnerable population of more than 155,000.
There are also many volcanoes in Ecuador, active/semi-active/extinct/etc. There are, thus, major volcanic eruptions from time to time. Cotopaxi, in eponymous Cotopaxi Province, is one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world, something like Mt. Rainier in Washington state. If it blows again like it did in 1877, it's going to kill a lot of people, and throw Ecuador into pandemonium. In 1877 Ecuador was a sparsely populated corner of the world, but today there are large cities and suburbs that sprawl for miles. Forget about evacuation in an emergency! People will die like flies, right where they are. It will be no different than in the big cities in the CONUS.
The 1877 Cotopaxi eruption destroyed the town of Latacunga and sent lahars for 100 kilometers or more, all the way to the Amazon forest to the east, and north and down to the Pacific Ocean to the west. Today the town of Latacunga has more than 77,000 inhabitants. The Valley of Los Chillos, through which some of the lahars would pass on their way to the Pacific Ocean, now has 300,000 to 400,000 inhabitants.
Were the Cotopaxi volcano to catastrophically erupt again, the loss of life would be extreme.
Given my own personal visions and those of others, as well as what I know of the volcanic and seismic history of Ecuador over the last two or three centuries, I assess the risk to be relatively high of one or more highly destructive earthquakes and/or volcanic eruptions to occur at any time, without warning.
We are moving into a period of increased, global, seismic activity. Countries all around the Pacific Ring of Fire are at elevated risk, as are countries in the eastern Mediterranean, Iran, northern India, the central U$$A, Inc., and more.
Nothing stays the same forever. Geophysical upheaval is coming to this planet. The recent M8.8 Kamchatka earthquake is our early warning alert.
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