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Strategies & Market Trends : Taking Advantage of a Sharply Changing Environment
NRG 163.25-1.2%Nov 17 3:59 PM EST

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Doug R
isopatch
To: Doug R who wrote (5112)9/30/2021 6:39:52 PM
From: maceng22 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) of 6334
 
Just reading the comments.

Paul Whiteley says:
30 September 2021 at 11:44
I lived on La Palma for 7 years back in the 90’s. Working at the observatory. Whilst walking above my house near the airport and below San Antonio I noticed a patch of white rock amongst the black. Investigating I found it to be embedded sea shells. The height was 110 metres above sea level. I couldn’t understand how they got there until I saw the MT theory some years later. Also a short while later whilst walking on the western flank of the Cumbre Vieja I came across a long N/S gully which was strange as all the other gullies ran E/W down the hill. This I discovered was the slump in the western flank from the 1949 eruption.
The current situation has 2 things going for no slump and that is the present eruption is away from the CV rift line and secondly the presence of numerous water “mines” which extract groundwater thereby taking away the expanding liquid which forms part of the slump hypothesis.
Worryingly though I have noticed in the last few days that the earthquake swarm around the current eruption S of El Paso has suddenly moved to the fault line along the Cumbre. This may mean a second vent along the summit may open. More worryingly still is that the location of 4 earthquakes have been along the slump line form the 49 eruption. I am extremely concerned.

Understanding the La Palma mega-landslide hypothesis: part 1 - The Landslide Blog - AGU Blogosphere

PA_SIS_eventos_03D.jpg (951×1013) (ign.es)

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