Scientist in japan say the March 11 tsunami had the power of an atom bomb.
They estimate that the wall of water had a punch of 40 tons per square meter. This explains the total devastation of the towns and cities hit by the monster wave.
Scientist in japan say the March 11 tsunami had the power of an atom bomb.
They estimate that the wall of water had a punch of 40 tons per square meter. This explains the total devastation of the towns and cities hit by the monster wave.
“the need to adapt [to the time change] is connected with stress and illnesses.”-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
This spring is the last time Russia will change its clocks. Come October they’ll be no daylight savings to deal with. In 1981 the Soviet Union started a daylight savings program. Russia continued the program, but more and more health studies, in Russia, are pointing to daylight savings as a cause of stress. Other scientists question those studies.
That fact is that, even here in the United States, a lot of people hate daylight savings.
In the U.S. the idea of daylight savings has been around since Benjamin Franklin. Since 1916 many countries have been experimenting with it. And many of them think it’s time to get rid of it.
The recent catastrophic disaster in Japan, which tore up many rail lines in northern Honshu, has brought back to life retired diesel powered locomotives.
That’s because, even on the rail lines that have been fixed, there is no electric power to run Japan’s modern electric trains. Electric power is going to be an issue for long time, because of the failed Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
Rail officials must be glad they didn’t get rid of their old diesel powered locomotives. About a dozen 40 plus year old engines have been brought out of retirement.
A relatively short rail line, from the west coast of Honshu, to the eastern prefectures, has been restored. The diesel engines have started running, bringing diesel fuel, and other supplies, to help people in those areas.
One of the engineers was around when they retired the diesel locomotives, and he’s glad they’re back. Low tech to the rescue of a high tech society.
I found the home video of liquefaction near Tokyo Disneyland, in Chiba Prefecture, on YouTube.
The two minute 39 second video shows sidewalks splitting, length wise, then moving in opposite directions. Water then begins to surge up from under the sidewalks and streets. The person doing the videography starts running as more water comes up everywhere, even asphalt streets start to split.
People are down on the ground, screaming. Keep in mind that Chiba Prefecture is between 137 and 200 miles from the where the 9.0 quake hit.
Tokyo Disneyland is still closed, after suffering damage from liquefaction.
In an area of Sendai city, in north east Honshu, Japan, there are survivors who are glad they refused to go to the official tsunami evacuation point, an elementary school. They are alive, but most of the people at the elementary school are not.
Based on computer modeling, disaster officials designated the elementary school as safe from tsunami. The computer model said tsunamis would not reach so far inland, so the school was safe. One survivor said he never understood that because the school is near sea level, he ran to a road that was much higher than the school, and survived. He says the tsunami went over the school’s second floor, people were inside.
A scientist, named Otomo (? think that’s his name), has been warning people for at least a year about the faulty claims by disaster officials. Otomo uses geologic evidence, which shows that tsunamis did indeed reach far inland, past the school. Officials ignored Otomo’s warnings.
This is an example of high tech ignorance, and arrogance.
An analyst interviewed by NHK (Nippon Housou Kyoukai/Japan Broadcasting Corporation), says until the reactor control rooms are turned on at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, plant operators will not know what is going on inside the reactors.
They are trying to get electric power to reactor 2 control room, because reactor 2 is still intact (reactors 1, 3 & 4 blew up).
Reactor 2 is leaking radioactive water, and emitting smoke. Restoring power to the control room will allow them to use the control room’s instruments and gauges to find out what is wrong with the reactor. In other words they are flying blind right now.
Another problem is that it looks like the reactor cores are leaking highly radioactive water. The analyst says the basements, under the reactors, are so full it’s like “swimming pools”.
Did anyone think that one nuclear disaster can adversely affect the economy? Fukushima Daiichi is one of the biggest nuclear plants in Japan, all its reactors are down. Even if efforts to control the nuclear disaster are somewhat successful, Fukushima Daiichi is done, its toast, ain’t no more electric power coming from that plant.
This is causing a huge electricity shortage in Japan. On top of that, there is not an emergency back up system in place, in Japan, to deal with the loss of such a large power plant. Again, one more thing the highly educated leaders felt sure they would never need to prepare for. That’s right, in a country like Japan, so addicted, and dependent on electrically operated things, no one believed that “what if” could really happen?
Japan has become the electronics/auto parts supplier to the world, but those companies run on electricity. Eventually there are going to be more companies shutting down, around the world, because they can’t get their parts from Japan.
How long will this last? Japan’s Economic Ministry said well into summer. The Ministry expects peak demand to hit 55 million kilowatts. Even if Tokyo Electric (TEPCo) gets other sources of electrical generation going, Japan will still be short 10 million kilowatts. This guarantees ‘rolling’ blackouts, which can only have a bad effect on industry.
As a result, Japan’s Prime Minister, Kan Naoto, has ordered emergency planning to come up with a way to counter the huge electricity shortage. Kan wants the plan complete by the end of April. Either way, we’re talking months of production shut downs around the world, meaning more people out of work.
As I’ve said in other articles, no more economic recovery. Could this be the start of a Global Great Depression?
Many of the parts needed to produce cars now, are electronics. The big electronics suppliers for the automotive industry are still shut down after the 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan.
Renesas Electronics, a maker of semiconductors used to control vehicles, has still not resumed operations.
Hitachi Automotive Systems, does not have full production capacity of electronics parts that control engines.
Another company, which makes parts for brakes and rubber products, suspended operations because their plant is located by the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
Mazda Motor will temporarily stop accepting orders from the United States due to a shortage of auto parts, caused by the disasters.
Mazda models being affected by the shut down including the SUV models CX-7 and CX-9, and the Mazda3.
A satellite imaging (geospatial) company in Japan, PASCO, has looked at the tsunami hit areas of north east Honshu.
The images show that at least 470 square kilometers (292 square miles) of land is affected by the March 11 tsunami.
Fukushima Prefecture suffered 110 square km (68 square miles) of tsunami damage, while Iwate Prefecture has about 50 square km (31 square miles) of damage.
Miyagi Prefecture is the hardest hit: 300 square kilometers (186 square miles) of damage, and, 70% of the land is still underwater.