Friday, January 28, 2011

Three giant spaceships to attack Earth in 2012?

UFO encounters became especially frequent in the middle of the 20th century, when it became impossible to disregard incidents of UFO sightings anymore. Special services started establishing special departments for air defense troops, secret laboratories were organized to study the phenomenon. It is not ruled out, that secret services have already had chances to study fragments of alien spaceships or even aliens themselves.

It is about time science should say its word regarding the problem, and it did. SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence), an independent non-commercial organization, released a sensational statement.

Three giant spaceships are heading towards Earth. The largest one of them is 240 kilometers wide. Two others are smaller. At present, the objects are beyond the orbit of Pluto.

The spaceships were detected by HAARD search system. The system, based in Alaska, was designed to study the phenomenon of northern lights. According to SETI researchers, the objects are nothing but extraterrestrial spaceships. They will be visible in optical telescopes as soon as they reach Mars’s orbit. The US government has been reportedly informed about the event. The ships will reach Earth in December 2012.

The date of the supposed space contact with extraterrestrial civilization brings up thoughts about the Mayan calendar, which ends on December 21, 2012. Is it just a coincidence? Most likely, though, SETI researchers mistake the wish for the reality: fifty years of constant monitoring of space have not yielded any results.


Nevertheless, mankind only begins to explore space. We are just newcomers in this huge and unexplored world. Many believe that there are many other civilizations in space beside our own civilization.

Rumor has it that the Americans classified a lot of information about findings on the Moon. In 1988, a prominent Chinese official, a member of the nation’s space program, unveiled pictures of human footprints on the lunar surface. The official stated that he had received the information from a reliable source and accused the Americans of concealing that information. The photos were dated from August 3, 1969 – two weeks after Armstrong and Aldrin stepped onto the surface of the Moon on July 20, 1969. Therefore, the materials of the lunar mission were studied and classified by NASA.

On March 15, 2009, The New York Times produced another sensation. The same Chinese official, Mao Kan, stated that he had obtained over than 1,000 secret NASA photographs depicting not only human footprints, but even a human carcass on the surface of the Moon. Some of the bones in the carcass were missing, the official said. The human corpse must have been dropped on the Moon from an alien spaceship, whereas the extraterrestrials kept some tissue samples for research.

The photos were taken by a lunar probe. The absence of air makes it possible to capture minute details from the lunar orbit. The pictures of the carcass were very clear.

Dr. Ken Johnston, former Manager of the Data and Photo Control Department at NASA’s Lunar Receiving Laboratory, said that US astronauts had found and photographed ancient ruins of artificial origin on the Moon. Supposedly, US astronauts had seen large unknown mechanisms on the Moon. The data were classified by the US government.

Is all of that just spam or it is fantastic truth? Will we ever know?

free counters

Reasons why the world can end at 2012

1. Mayan Calendar

The first mob to predict 2012 as the end of the world were the Mayans, a bloodthirsty race that were good at two things:

Building highly accurate astrological equipment out of stone and

Sacrificing Virgins.


mayan_calendar.jpg

Thousands of years ago they managed to calculate the length of the lunar moon as 329.53020 days, only 34 seconds out. The Mayan calendar predicts that the Earth will end on December 21, 2012. Given that they were pretty close to the mark with the lunar cycle, it’s likely they’ve got the end of the world right as well.

2. Sun Storms

Solar experts from around the world monitoring the sun have made a startling discovery: our sun is in a bit of strife. The energy output of the sun is, like most things in nature, cyclic, and it’s supposed to be in the middle of a period of relative stability. However, recent solar storms have been bombarding the Earth with so much radiation energy, it’s been knocking out power grids and destroying satellites. This activity is predicted to get worse, and calculations suggest it’ll reach its deadly peak sometime in 2012..

2012_Sun_explosion_2012.jpg

3. The Atom Smasher

Scientists in Europe have been building the world’s largest particle accelerator. Basically its a 27km tunnel designed to smash atoms together to find out what makes the Universe tick. However, the mega-gadget has caused serious concern, with some scientists suggesting that it’s properly even a bad idea to turn it on in the first place. They’re predicting all manner of deadly results, including mini black holes. So when this machine is fired up for its first serious experiment in 2012, the world could be crushed into a super-dense blob the size of a basketball.


4. The Bible says…

If having scientists warning us about the end of the world isn’t bad enough,religious folks are getting in on the act aswell. Interpretations of the Christian Bible reveal that the date for Armageddon, the final battle between Good an Evil, has been set down for 2012. The I Ching, also known as the Chinese book of Changes, says the same thing, as do various sections of the Hindu teachings.

5. Super Volcano

Yellowstone National Park in the United States is famous for its thermal springs and Old Faithful geyser. The reason for this is simple - it’s sitting on top of the world’s biggest volcano, and geological experts are beginning to get nervous sweats. The Yellowstone volcano has a pattern of erupting every 650,000 years or so, and we’re many years overdue for an explosion that will fill the atmosphere with ash, blocking the sun and plunging the Earth into a frozen winter that could last up to 15,000 years. The pressure under the Yellowstone is building steadily, and geologists have set 2012 as a likely date for the big bang.

super_volcano_2012.jpg

6. The Physicists

This one’s case of bog-simple maths mathematics. Physicists at Berekely Uni have been crunching the numbers. and they’ve determined that the Earth is well overdue for a major catastrophic event. Even worse, they’re claiming their calculations prove, that we’re all going to die, very soon - while also saying their prediction comes with a certainty of 99 percent- and 2012 just happens to be the best guess as to when it occurs.


7. Polar Shift

We all know the Earth is surrounded by a magnetic field that sheilds us from most of the sun’s radiation. What you might not know is that the magnetic poles we call north and south have a nasty habit of swapping places every 750,000 years or so - and right now we’re about 30,000 years overdue. Scientists have noted that the poles are drifting apart roughly 20-30kms each year, much faster than ever before, which points to a pole-shift being right around the corner. While the pole shift is underway, the magnetic field is disrupted and will eventually disappear, sometimes for up to 100 years. The result is enough UV outdoors to crisp your skin in seconds, killing everything it touches.

polar_shift_2012.gif

Source

Apparently some of the reasons listed out there have been already disproved like the atom smasher is no longer a threat as it’s first operation proved to be a success rather than ending in a doomsday.If you really believe there is going to be no doomsday in 2012 this info might also interest you “How to survive 2012“.

Is There Life After 2012?

Many of the best astrologers in the world gathered in Seattle over Memorial Day weekend to discuss astrological trends far beyond 2012 – and yes, it’s not all over!


While we see challenges ahead in this time period, we are also truly excited by the new possibilities that will be available to each of you during this time. That great dream you’ve had of what you might do in the world may suddenly be open to you, giving you a new life and new fulfillment. The “end time” of the Mayan calendar is viewed by most astrologers not as the end of the world, but as the ending of “the way things were,” opening the door to amazing new beginnings for all of us.

This is an exhilarating new Renaissance for astrologers, as so many new tools are available to us to complete our individual research projects and share them with our fellow astrologers. Our new knowledge ranges from recently interpreted ancient texts full of lost wisdom to very modern research on how the new (dwarf) planets affect our astrology charts.

“Astrologer’s astrologer” Robert Hand shared his latest fascinating findings from Classical Greek and Latin astrology. Demetra George provided her feminine view of these powerful and mysterious old documents that enhance our ability to practice modern astrology.

From a modern viewpoint, Philip Sedgwick researches the powerful new planets around Pluto. These are truly creative forces in your chart and new guides into your future: All discovered within the past decade, fiery Eris (Mars’ sister) along with the hero Makemake, god of Rapa Nui (Easter Island), the creative Hawai’ian Mother Goddess, Haumea, equally creative Southern California god Quaoar who “sang and danced the universe into existence,” and the mysterious and amazing Sedna, Inuit goddess who lives at the bottom of the sea and rules the dolphins and whales.

Conference organizer Laura Nalbandian offered a whole new view of Virgo. She excited a room full of astrologers with her insights into this sign, and how it can evolve beyond “self-critical analysis” into an awakening that allows you to share your gifts with others more easily. This is how the zodiac, and our own “hero’s journey,” flow from confident, creative Leo into Virgo’s more discerning self-reflection – the “defining and editing” phase so crucial to any work of creativity – and then into the Libra world of sharing created beauty and balance with others. This is not a sign to be dismissed as “detail-oriented.”

Darby Costello came from London, offering us great new ways of viewing Venus – the goddess of seduction and beauty – in your chart. As an expert on the history and ways of Venus in our lives, Darby offered us better tools to bring forth the rich delights Venus offers. These include that irresistible something that draws others to you, and the astrological indicators for that person who is waiting for your charms. We studied the “Venus connections” in charts from Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt to Paul Newman and JoAnne Woodward to give us insights.

Many other great talents shared new techniques and insights that will enhance the work we do at California Psychics. The consensus among the astrologers there was that the current trends and cycles indicate that this will be a powerfully creative period, much like the 1960s. However, our tools to deliver the inspired messages and creative manifestations won’t be limited to music and film this time, but will include our virtual family of internet connections and information… like right here on this site. It sounds like a thrilling time is in store for us!

Thursday, January 27, 2011

2012 Videos

Please Note: If you wish to watch one of the plethora of videos regarding 2012, made by anonymous folk who have combined found imagery with a doom and gloom voiceover, head over to YouTube and search for 2012 - you can waste weeks there.

Any videos on this page have my recommendation - I may not agree with everything they say, but in my opinion they are worthy of sharing - Rob.

2012 Debunked

It's well worth watching for anyone who wants to understand what the "galactic alignment" is all about, and what it isn't. You can also watch the entire video in WMV Format






























NBC Fallout Shelter

It's not cheap at $170,000 installed, but this is how a bunker should be made. NBC Fallout Shelters Website


























Comet Caesar

Dark Comet in 2012?

When beggars die there are no comets seen. The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes.

Shakespeare

Julius Caesar


When considering what might cause us grief in 2012, few if any researchers consider the start of the Mayan Long Count calendar to have any importance. This is surprising, because the reason for the calendar beginning on August 11 3114BC might contain clues about 2012 itself. After all, the Mayan culture did not exist 5,000 years ago, so either they randomly chose an ancient date on a whim, or an earlier civilization was behind the calendar, and they knew something important occurred on that date.




What could happen in 3114BC, and also in 2012AD? No civilization has lasted that long, so they are unlikely to be man-made events. Any natural events that occur so infrequently on Earth are virtually impossible to predict (volcanic eruptions for example). So that leaves us with astronomical events. The astrology of the pair of dates has been well studied, so we can rule out alignments of the stars and planets. That leaves the Sun, which we barely understand today, and comets. Is there a comet with a periodicy of 5000 years, due to return in 2012? Without any evidence from 3114BC it is impossible to say. Given that we are now near the end of the Mayan 5th age, could their calendar be designed to cover five orbits of a comet? And end catastrophically in 2012?



Most people have not heard of Comet Caesar (it doesn't even have a Wikipedia entry), and hopefully this will remain so. However, if we are to suffer a terrible tragedy in 2012, it is currently my leading candidate, and the purpose of this article is to explain why.


Comet Caesar


comet caesar

Comet Caesar was the most famous comet of its day, and one of the brightest ever witnessed. It was visible during an annual Roman festival held in 44BC, shortly after Julius Caesar's death. The following quotes are from The Greatest Comets in History: Broom Stars and Celestial Scimitars by David Seargent:


This was the comet that blazed in the skies of Rome following the assassination of Julius Caesar and which became immortalized by the Romans on the reverse of a coin bearing a portrait of Augustus struck in honor of the great Julius.



...According to Pliny, Octavian wrote that "On the very days of my games, a comet was visible over the course of seven days, in the northern region of the heavens. It rose at about the eleventh hour of the day and was bright and plainly seen from all lands".



...In the fourth century of our era, Servius presented an account that had the comet visible for 3 days and visible at midday and during the daytime.

Comet Caesar is a parabolic comet - a comet that returns less frequently than every 200 years.
Most parabolic comets have orbits significantly longer than 200 years, and very few have ever been observed to make a complete orbit.[1] Astronomers expect 50 percent of parabolic comets will receive gravitational nudges that cause them to never orbit the Sun again. Those that remain in orbit should be slowed with each passage, eventually becoming intermediate or short-period comets.[2] Therefore we either never see them again, or they take so long to return that we don't know which, if any, have historical records they match up with.




In my search for the most likely 2012 culprit, I have constantly asked myself, could the ancients have predicted this? Asteroids and comets are definitely predictable in a broad sense, and all that it takes is observation and mathematics. Such calculations are not easy. They require recalculating the orbit for every day of every year, according to where the object is then located, and how the planets are affecting its course. If ancient astronomers had considered the period of a comet or asteroid to be fixed, rather than varying due to the gravitational influences of planets, then there may have been inaccuracies in any 2012 prediction they made. However the daily recalculations were certainly not impossible in ancient times.

Predictability of Comets

Perhaps the most famous comet, even today, is Halley's Comet. Edmond Halley - as well as a team of French mathematicians - predicted the return of this comet, not just from knowing the dates of its past visits, but by calculating the gravitational effects of planets like Saturn and Jupiter. They did this by hand.



A single line in the Talmud suggests that 1st century Jewish astronomers were also aware of the periodicy of Halley's Comet:


"a star which appears once in seventy years that makes the captains of the ships err".

To go from calculating the return of a comet, to having knowledge that it will probably strike Earth, is a major leap. Although that is not to say they weren't merely predicting the return of a spectacular comet, let's investigate the possibility that an ancient culture was capable of predicting the actual impact of a comet in 2012.



First of all, for this hypothesis to have any validity, the comet must be a long period one; that is, it must pass our planet less frequently than once every 200 years. More frequent comets would be well known by modern astronomers, and would most likely have their future orbits determined.  



According to Wikipedia, there are just 40 known comets with a periodicy greater than 200 years (or non-periodic comets). Of these, 38 have been observed since 1577AD. The only prior dates were 1106AD and 44BC. To me this suggests that a great many earlier observations would have been made, we just don't have evidence of such.
The Great Comet of 1106AD was seen from Europe to Japan. A Welsh text said of it:


In that year there was seen a star wonderful to behold, throwing out behind it a beam of light of the thickness of a pillar in size and of exceeding brightness.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X/1106_C1

Were we to have detailed records of comets from more historical times, we might have a similar description with which we could determine the periodicy of the 1106 comet. Without this, we have nothing to base its return on - could be tomorrow, could be never. [3]



You could say the same about Comet Caesar, the aforementioned earliest recorded comet of 44BC. Without another record of it, we cannot determine when it will return next. While there may not be any surviving record of a prior passage, perhaps we can make an implication from the Long Count calendar. If the end of the calendar is actually the date a comet will strike Earth, what is the most logical reason for the start date?


If, and this is obviously pure speculation, it had been observed in 3114BC, and again in 44BC, could it be returning once again in 2012? With a precise periodicy of 1025.2 years (which equals four Mayan Short Counts) we get the following sequence of dates:

  • 3114BC - start of the Long Count calendar
  • 2089BC - 2104/2105 is when the Great Flood occurred according to the Hebrew Calendar
  • 1064BC - 1077 was the end of the Egyptian New Kingdom, marking the beginning of Egypt's decline
  • 39BC - Comet Caesar was witnessed in 44BC
  • 987AD - Dark Ages
  • 2012AD  - end of the Long Count calendar

Is 39BC close enough to 44BC? In 1758 the French astronomers who calculated the return of Halley's Comet determined that the gravitational effects of Saturn and Jupiter would make a difference of 618 days to its existing orbit, or almost 2 years.  Is a difference of 5 years within 5 orbits outside the realms of possibility?


Variable Periodicy of Comets


When Comet Hyakutake was discovered in 1996, astronomers determined that on the way in to our solar system it had an estimated periodicy of 17,000 years, yet after having its orbit disturbed by the largest planets, its new course meant it would take between 72,000 and 114,000 years to return.




When 23P/Brorsen-Metcalf was first discovered it was closest to Earth in August 1847. After completing its orbit it was back in that approximate spot in October 1919, and again in August 1989. The two observed periods were 72 years and 70 years. That's roughly a 3% deviation between 2 orbits.

The periodicy of a comet can vary from a little, to a lot, to so much we never see it again. It is entirely possible that Comet Caesar was seen the very same years as the Great Flood, the end of the Egyptian New Kingdom, the start of the Long Count calendar - and will return in 2012.

Where are the records?


…they were either not observed or were observed and recovered by illiterate, uneducated peasants. It was quite unthinkable that the sophisticated urban theologian of A.D. 1000… should take seriously the allegations of such rabble that stones fell from the sky.



…Modern astronomers seeking accounts of ancient astronomical events …find the records of medieval Europe sparse at best.
[4]


To explain the absence of records for Comet Caesar prior to 44BC is easy – lost in the annals of history that never made it. But what of 987AD? Could it really go from observed in 44BC, to not observed at all? Or has the record from 987AD +/-3 years, just disappeared?



The former possibility is covered by the concept of dark comets, described below. To answer the latter possibility, 987 was in the Dark Ages, renowned for a lack of records. In fact so lacking that some researchers have speculated that the era never existed at all!



Halley's Comet was observed in 837 according to records from Japan, China, and Germany. The next observation was in 912, and was recorded in the Annals of Ulster, like this: "A dark and rainy year. A comet appeared”. There is no specific record of its return in 990, and was next spotted in 1066, where it was recorded as having an influence on the Battle of Hastings.




The only mention of a comet circa 987AD (when I approximately hypothesize Comet Caesar would have returned) is indirect, and attributed to Eilmer of Malmesbury, a Benedictine monk:

You've come, have you? - You've come, you source of tears to many mothers. It is long since I saw you; but as I see you now you are much more terrible, for I see you brandishing the downfall of my country

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eilmer_of_Malmesbury

He described this appearance in 1066. Because the previous passage of Halley's Comet would have been in 990AD, and he was an “old man” in 1066, it is believed that he could have seen the comet when he was 5 years old, and have would been 76 years old in 1066 when he was quoted. But what if he was just a few years older in 1066, and was actually recalling a comet he witnessed in 987AD? Could he have seen the most recent passing of Comet Caesar, and not Halley's Comet, in the closing years of the tenth century?




Taking a different angle, if there is no specific record of Halley's Comet in 990AD, it fits that a return of Comet Caesar circa 987AD also avoided any record that survives to this day.

For some, a simple lack of record will suffice, and the hypothesis is feasible. For the others, I will describe a mechanism from which the comet rapidly loses visibility.

Dark Comets


There's only one difference between dark comets and regular comets - we won't see the approach of the dark comet.



In early 2009 many news articles reported the findings of British astronomers Bill Napier (Cardiff University) and David Asher (Armagh Observatory), and reading them sent a shiver down my spine, prompting me to research the possibilities further.


"There is a case to be made that dark, dormant comets are a significant but largely unseen hazard," says Napier.



…periodic comet showers appear to correlate with the dates of ancient impact craters found on Earth, which would suggest that most impactors in the past were comets, not asteroids.

Now Napier and Asher warn that some of these comets may still be zipping around the solar system. Other observations support their case. The rate that bright comets enter the solar system implies there should be around 3000 of them buzzing around, and yet only 25 are known.[5]

Until now it was commonly accepted that more than 90% of meteors and comets that could cause us harm were known and tracked by astronomers and government agencies. That thousands of comets that are potentially heading straight for us are not known or tracked is rather frightening. How can a comet become dark?




 The science is actually quite easy to understand. Comets start out with ice on their surface. Every time they orbit around the Sun, the heat melts some ice. Eventually there is no ice left. And the only way we can easily see comets is from light reflecting off the ice.

In 1983, Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock passed by Earth at a distance of 5 million kilometres, the closest known pass by any known comet for 200 years. It was spotted only two weeks ahead of its closest approach. "It had only 1 per cent of its surface active," says Napier. Comet Borrelly, visited by NASA's Deep Space 1 probe in 2001, was found to have extremely dark patches over much of its surface.[6]

Clark Chapman, from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, is not so concerned, saying that the dark comets 'would absorb sunlight very well' and therefore should be possible to detect from the heat they would emit. I'm not qualified to judge this statement, but from a layman's point of view, I would think a hand-held mirror reflecting the sun's light from a mile away is far more easily seen than a slab of rock that is so hot you could fry an egg on it.


Here are a couple of examples of lost comets. One of the reasons they are no longer observed could be that they have lost their luminosity.

  • 18D/Perrine-Mrkos - seen in 1896 and 1909, then 1955, then 1969, and not since.
  • 5D/Brorsen - first spotted in 1846, last seen in 1879. With an orbital period of 5.5 years. Has been as close as 0.52 AU to Earth, and as far as 1.5AU. Japanese astronomers hoped to spot it in 1976, but failed.

The orbital period of 5D/Brorsen suggests it could be passing by in 2012, if it is still on course. There is even a possible case of a dark comet harming us (in a roundabout way) in recent times. Paul Wiegert of the University of Western Ontario has determined that the dark comet D/1895 Q1 (Swift) collided with NASA's Mariner 4 Mars probe in 1967. Given that the comet was only ever observed in 1895/1896, there is not enough data to be absolutely certain, but something took out the probe, and a dark comet is the leading candidate.



Many lost comets could be coming close to Earth in 2012, but without recent observations, there is no way of accurately calculating their passage.


A long period comet would be the best candidate for a 2012 culprit for two reasons:

  • an ancient civilization may have tracked comets for much longer than our present civilization, giving them a great advantage in determining the periodicy of long period comets
  • a longer period that adds up to a 2012 rendezvous is more statistically reliable than that of a short period comet. Every passage increases the chance of permutations due to encounters with the gravity of planets it may pass. A comet that has orbited 4 times in the last 2000 years is more likely to still be on course than one that has orbited unseen 50 times in the last 200 years.

Summary


Even without the possible return of Comet Caesar, dark comets are the leading contender for triggering a predictable 2012 cataclysm. Comets were known to the ancients - we have many ancient texts providing us with descriptive names like "fire from the sky" - and their cyclical nature makes it easy for any civilization with mathematical prowess to predict. Thousands of hypothetical dark comets remain undiscovered in modern times, and if we do find one on a collision course with our planet, we may only have a few years, or even a few days, to prepare. And those times will be times of mass panic.


Notes



1. Steel, Rogue Asteroids and Doomsday Comets, 25. The longest observed orbital period for a comet is 153P/Ikeya-Zhang with 341 years, having been discovered in 1661, and again in 2002.


2. Gribbin, Fire on Earth, 103

3. Of course there is the possibility that the Great Comet of 1106AD and the 44BC comet are one and the same. If that were true, it could be expected to return circa 2250AD.


4. Lewis, Rain of Fire and Ice, 17

5. Parsons, “'Dark' comets may pose threat to Earth.”


6. Ibid.


Addendum


Teleilat Ghassul is located in the Jordan Valley near the Dead Sea is an important site from the Chalcolithic period. Many of the mud brick homes that have been unearthed featured remarkable wall paintings. Paintings were not permanent - it was common for old paintings to be coated with a white lime plaster, and new paintings taking their place. Up to 20 successive layers have been found. Perhaps this 2-metre mural was kept because it represented an important or memorable event:


Teleilat Ghassul Star


This is pure speculation, but just as the coin depicted above used an eight-pointed star to represent Comet Caesar, perhaps this is a record of the same comet, but from a different era? For the idea to have any merit, a date for the mural should fit closely the dates I have listed for any previous returns there may have been - 1064BC, 2089BC or 31143BC.


Various radiocarbon dates have been taken from the site, from dung, cereal and wood, and those dates suggest that the occupation lasted roughly 1000 years, ending at approximately 3800BC. The paintings themselves do not seem to have been dated, nor would there be any reason to do so. One must conclude that the most likely date for the painting would be during the period of occupation, so possibly it represents the return of Comet Caesar prior to 3114BC, somewhere around 4139BC.


There are also two comet images at Megiddo, and these have been assigned a date of Early Bronze Age I, which is 3300-3000 BC in the Near East, and fits our 3114BC date perfectly. They were found on paving stones. The broom shape is actually a very common way of depicting comets in many ancient cultures, including the Chinese.


Tel Megiddo Star


Megiddo Star


The broom shape is actually a very common way of depicting comets in many ancient cultures, including the Chinese.


Brush Comets from Ancient China


Furthermore, a controversial theory suggests a major asteroid impact dated 3123BC, extremely close to the start of the Long Count calendar.

Asteroids and Comets

ASTEROIDS and COMETS

[The] story of how Phaëton, child of the sun, harnessed his father’s chariot, but was unable to guide it along his father’s course and so burnt up things on the earth and was himself destroyed by a thunderbolt, is a mythical version of the truth that there is at long intervals a variation in the course of the heavenly bodies and a consequent widespread destruction by fire of things on earth.
Plato
Timaeus

How Big Is The Risk?

Here is a rundown of the different sizes, their probabilities, the chances of us seeing them coming, and the theoretical approximates of the damage they could inflict. Because we know so little about the makeup of comets, I’ve lumped them in with asteroids for convenience.

1 kilometer diameter or larger
The aim of NASA and their various branches and allies is to discover at least 99% of these monsters.
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/faq/
A 10km asteroid strike would create waves in the Earth’s crust higher than houses, and a blast of 500ºC air travelling at 2500 kph. Any creature within 12 million sq km would be wiped out.(1) That’s roughly the size of the USA, Europe or Australia

500 metre
According to Duncan Steel (2), we are unlikely to discover more than half of the asteroids and comets in our solar system with a 500 meter diameter. Just one of these would create a crater 10km wide, and destroy all life within 1,000sq km.(3)

100 metre
These are so small, in terms of our ability to discover them, that only a few percent are likely to be spotted, says Steel. If a 100m asteroid struck Earth at 19km/sec the resulting crater would be 2km across, and it would destroy all life within 200sq km. These hit Earth with an average frequency of one every 22,000 years.(4) Or according to Gerrit L. Verschuur, as often as every 1,000 years (5).

50 metre – Tunguska size
Objects with a diameter of 50-60 meters pass closer to Earth than the Moon about once per week.(6) Aside from the famous Tunguska incident, and serving as a reminder that Tunguska was not a “one-off”, a smaller asteroid exploded mid-air over eastern Siberia in 1947, leaving “122 craters up to 26m wide and 5m deep.”(7) It weighed about 70 tonnes.

They Strike Earth All The Time!

Meteors do make it to Earth – here are some examples that serve as a reminder:

1 metre – Barwell, UK – 1965
Roughly half of Coventry, a city of 300,000 that it passed over, say they heard it. Some of the high frequencies given off meant horses heard it before it became visible. Those that could see it through the evening clouds estimated the tail to be 20 degrees long. It broke up into many pieces, and although some struck buildings, nobody was hurt.

Astrophysicists from the Herzberg Institute in Ottawa, Canada, have estimated that an average of 16 buildings are damaged by meteorites each year, with a human being hit every nine years, sometimes fatally.(8)

Recorded deaths by meteorites and asteroids:
  • 588 AD, 10 people, China
  • 1490, supposedly 10,000 people, China
  • 1511, Franciscan monk, Cremona, Italy
  • 1650, Another monk (!), Milan, Italy
  • 1647-54,  2 sailors at sea
  • 1790, A farmer and cattle, France
  • 1825 , A man, India
  • 1827, A man, India
  • 1874, Child, China
  • 1879, Man in bed, Indiana, USA
  • 1879, Farmer, France
  • 1897, Horse, West Virginia, USA
  • 1907, Entire family, China
  • 1908, 2 people reported, Tunguska
  • 1911, Dog, Egypt
  • 1929, 1 member of a bridal party, Zvezvan, Yugoslavia
Buildings are stuck, and people nearly hit, most years. A recent example (June 2009) involved a German schoolboy, Gerrit Blank, who was left with a scar on his hand when he was grazed by a meteorite that left a 30cm-wide crater in the pavement.

In 1931, three asteroid fragments struck a Brazilian jungle and 1,300 square kilometers of rainforest were destroyed by wall of fire. (9)

On February 1, 1994, near the Marshall Islands in the western Pacific, a handful of fishermen witnessed a hundred-kiloton explosion (that's 10x Hiroshima) that momentarily flashed brighter than the sun. This asteroid has been estimated to be just 6-17 metres across, but plenty sufficient to decimate a city - so it was extremely fortunate (for humans) that it exploded above the ocean. According to Duncan Steel:

"It is therefore not surprising that the 10-meter-or-so asteroid that blew up over a largely vacant area of the western Pacific on February 1, 1994, producing an explosion equivalent to at least ten times that of the Hiroshima bomb (and possibly rather more), was not seen prior to impact. Surveillance satellites registered it as the brightest such explosion that they have picked up so far. Despite the efforts of numerous scientists in this area of study to make the military aware that such detonations do occur naturally, it appears that the U.S. President was awakened because the Pentagon thought that this incident might be a hostile nuclear explosion." (10)

Relatively recent, large impacts

Merewether crater, west of Ungava Bay in Canada, is 200m in diameter and was formed less than 10,000 years ago. More recent is the Henbury crater cluster near Alice Springs, Australia. The twelve craters have been dated at between 2,000 and 6,000 years ago. The largest is 180m across and 15m deep. According to Aboriginal legend, the site is known as “sun walk fire devil rock”, suggesting that the event had witnesses.

Recent Near Misses

In 1937 an asteroid called Hermes, with a diameter of one kilometer, became the closest recorded passage to Earth. When it crossed our orbit it was 780,000kms away, twice the distance of the moon. In terms of time, it missed us by a mere 5 hours. It was reported 2 months later, with newspapers claiming we almost witnessed the destruction of our planet. (11)

1989 – a 300m asteroid (known as 4581 Asclepius or 1989 FC) missed us by 690,000kms and 7 hours. It was not spotted until after it had flown by. It is due to return in 2012, but is not expected to come as close.
1991 – a 100m asteroid (1991 BA) passed within 170,000kms.
1996 – a 300–500 m asteroid, (1996 JA1_, passed within 450,000 km of Earth

In the near future, the number one concern is a 320 m asteroid known as 99942 Apophis. Although when first discovered it was considered to have a 1 in 17 chance of hitting Earth, it is now understood to only come as close as 25,600 kilometres – close enough to knock out a communications satellite!

What Are The Odds?

Given recent examples, it is easy to believe that incidences of humans being killed by such impacts are rare. However, when you consider the catastrophic impacts that happen less often ( but when they do, can kill millions), the odds become a little bit more sobering. Austen Atkinson says the odds of being killed by a comet or asteroid is 1 in 24,000. (12) And then he points out that the odds of contracting mad-cow disease is 1 in 15 million, yet that scared most of the world enough to ban the importation of British beef.

1 in 24,000 is roughly the same odds for dying as a result of a plane crash. I’m not alone in worrying about this every time I board a plane…

The problem we have is easily understood – governments generally react after the fact, not before. It is only after some of us have suffered somehow that the government decides to do something about it – they are not in the business of scaring us with predictions of what might happen, unless it suits them (think pre-emptive military strikes).

The folk running the city of New Orleans were very aware of the risk of flooding they faced from hurricanes, and they chose to gamble that it wouldn’t happen on their watch, a gamble that they lost with Katrina. Appropriate spending, relative to the risk they faced, would have saved New Orleans. If it is an “Act of God”, our governments seem to universally elect to be underprepared for it. Especially when, in the case of New Orleans, to be prepared would have taken a commitment of $1billion and 20 years.

At present, NASA’s "Spaceguard Survey", which aims to spot Near-Earth Objects greater than 1 kilometer in diameter, has a budget of $4.1 million per year from 2006 through to 2012. This is a pitiful effort, relative to the risk, and explains why most new comets are discovered by amateurs.

Effect of a Comet/Asteroid Striking Earth

The easiest to predict is the most likely – the collision occurring in the ocean. First of all, here’s some data regarding recent tsunamis caused by earthquakes and volcanoes…

1960: An earthquake in Chile with a magnitude of 9.5 (the largest magnitude ever recorded) caused the death of 6000 people worldwide. 61 of the victims were in Hawaii, as the result of a tsunami that arrived 14 hours later – when it struck it was 10-15 meters in height . The same tsunami killed 142 people in Japan, when it arrived 22 hours after the earthquake. By then its height had reduced to between 1 and 5 meters. The deep-water wave (the height of the tsunami before it reaches land) was only 20 cms.

2004: The Indian Ocean tsunami was caused by the second largest earthquake ever measured (9.1-9.3), and was much more devastating. It killed more than 225,000 people in eleven countries with waves as high as 30 meters. However, before reaching land it was mere 60 cms in height.

We don’t know when an asteroid or meteor will strike Earth next, but we know that in the past there have been many – they leave a crater. The type of tsunami they can create has not been recorded by humans (as far as we know), so all we have are best guesses coming from experts.

The threat of tsunamis caused by asteroid impacts has only recently been recognized, due to the work of Jack Hills and Patrick Goda of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. They have performed calculations showing that the hypothetical 500-meter asteroid mentioned earlier would produce a deep water wave 50 to 100 meters in amplitude, even at a range of 1,000 kilometers from ground zero. Since the tsunami height could be amplified by a factor of 20 or more in the run up as continental shelves are encountered, we are referring here to a tsunami several kilometers in height. Even if the impact were between New Zealand and Tahiti, the tsunami breaking on Japan would be perhaps 200 to 300 meters high, and heaven help New Zealand and Tahiti themselves!… (13)

In case you are wondering how far inland you would need to be to survive, formulas have been determined. A 200-300 meter tsunami hitting a populated coastline (buildings will slow it hinder its advance) will travel 50-100 kilometers inland, or even further if the terrain is flat. (14)

If you are thinking to yourself “fair enough, but I can’t imagine a tsunami that high ever occurring”, consider this; coral has been found in Lanai, Hawaii, 326 meters above sea level, quite possibly due to a tsunami passing through.

There have been several studies made regarding the Tunguska event. Two figure it was an asteroid, with a diameter of 60, or 90-190 meters. Another study decided it was a comet with a diameter of 1200 meters. (15) According to Duncan Steel, generally speaking, anything that can make it through the atmosphere without disintegrating, and affect more than just the spot where it crashes, would need to be 50 meters wide (for an asteroid) and 100 meters wide (for a comet). To put it another way, if it hits the ocean we either won’t notice, or there will be a substantial tsunami, and nothing in between. (16)

A 100-meter object will typically strike Earth once every 1,000 years, and if it struck land would lay waste to an area of about 10,000 square kilometers – roughly the same size as Connecticut. The deaths just from the impact would depend on the population density, but would be much less than if it struck the ocean. Shin Yabushita has calculated that the odds of most of the Pacific Rim cities being wiped out by an asteroid/comet driven tsunami, in the next century, is 1%. A sobering figure. (17)

In terms of survival, land and sea impacts are quite different. A sea impact will create a tsunami, and depending on the location, could wipe out many major cities. Once the waves subside, Earth is pretty much back to normal, but we will be missing the people and the infrastructure that were destroyed. While this would be tragic for the global economy, people living outside the path of the tsunami will still have their crops and climate, and life will go on.

A terrestrial impact might cause less immediate damage, but create long-term hardships.

Overall, Gilmour and his colleagues have identified a dozen “environmental stresses” caused by the K-T impact. The strong winds and tsunamis lasted for a matter of hours; fires lasted for months, as did the darkness and cold partly caused by the fires; the greenhouse effect began to take grip as the darkness cleared, boosted early on by the presence of water vapour in the air, and maintained by the long-term presence of carbon dioxide; poisons and mutagens remained active for years, as did the effects of acid rain; the ozone layer must have been severely disrupted by the disturbance to the atmosphere, and then there was the volcanic activity triggered by the impact. (18)

As a recent example, the Gribbins mention a “relatively modest” forest fire in California, 1987, which reduced valley temperatures by 15 degrees Celsius for an entire week.
With the ozone layer depleted by nitric oxides, crops would be burnt, and humans venturing outside unprotected would risk cancer. Few crops would survive acid rain, fires, extended periods of darkness and ozone depletion. Humans and animals would starve, and we would also miss the ability of plant life to remove carbon dioxide from our atmosphere. The amount of time it would take for Gaia to return to a steady state environment is not known.

The great K/T boundary extinction of 65 million years ago is a good example of how bad it can get, and how extinctions occur. A 15 kilometer wide asteroid crashed into North America. Debris from the impact was ejected into the atmosphere, and then fell as billions of tiny bullets. A fireball engulfed the continent, soot adding to the dust in the atmosphere. Global temperatures dropped by as much as 10 degrees Celsius. Plants died –they could not survive the triple-whammy of fire, acid rain and lack of sunlight. Large animals starved. Some smaller animals, those that didn’t mind feeding on dead tissue and rotting vegetation, managed to survive, as a species. Phytoplankton, dependant on sunlight, died. Because it was the fundamental basis of the oceanic food chain, the oceans became more about death than life. It is estimated that 75 percent of all Earth’s species became extinct following that singular asteroid impact.

Would we be warned? And how?

In March 1996, a declaration by the Council of Europe, discussing the dangers of Near-Earth Objects, and name-checking Tunguska and Shoemaker-Levy, said that the “possible consequences are so vast that every reasonable effort should be encouraged to minimise them.” (19)

A single impact by a rock the size of the Millennium Dome could devastate the surface of the globe with an explosive release of energy five times more powerful than the entire world's nuclear arsenal. On 19 May 1996, just such an object came within 280,000 miles of Earth: six hours from collision.

Humankind could have been eradicated.

The asteroid (named JA1) sailed into our system - the largest object to approach Earth, other than the moon, since records began in 1833 - and was only four days away before two astronomers (Tim Spahr and Carl Hergenrother) in Tuscon, Arizona, detected it and alerted the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). No one was prepared. Nothing could be done to prevent its approach. Yet no one was told: no public warning was given. The world's powers watched the asteroid approach, impotent and unable to prevent the end of human civilisation. At the last moment, when it was only 400,000 miles, or seven hours, away from impact, its trajectory carried it away from our world. (20)


A few months later physicist Edward Teller wrote to the British Prime Minister, warning him of the serious threat posed by asteroids and comets - Teller, as a key player in the development of the hydrogen bomb, knew all about how fragile human existence is. (21)

The same year the US Department of Defense created a report that said:
Due to a lack of awareness and emphasis, the world is not socially, economically or politically prepared to deal with the vulnerability of ...ECO (Earth Crossing Object) impacts and their potential consequences.

...These authors contend that the stakes are simply too high not to pursue direct and viable solutions to the ECO problem. Indeed, the survival of humanity is at stake. (22)

One of the brightest comets ever seen was Halle-Bopp. With a nucleus estimated at 40kms it is certainly large enough to wipe out all of humankind. It is rather discomforting to learn that we only noticed it in 1995, and if it happened to have been aimed straight at us, would have struck in 1997. Two years would not be enough time to plan/build/launch a defense.

While asteroids mostly follow the same plane of orbit as the planets, quite a narrow band of sky that is under regular observation – comets can come from anywhere, they can sneak up on us. Consequently comets tend to be discovered by amateur astronomers, while NASA lacks the funds (and perhaps willingness) to carry out full-sky observations.

It is not for me to speculate on our future ability to change the path of an asteroid or comet, should one have our planet in its sights. But based on what is currently known, it seems unlikely that we will be prepared to take on such an object if it was destined to crash into us in 2012. However, you never know what NASA might have been putting together in secret.

Therefore my presumption is this, we cannot thwart a comet or asteroid, and if one strikes us in 2012 there will be significant loss of life, depending on the size and location of impact. The bigger it is, the more likely we are to see it coming, yet the greater the odds of it wiping out all of humanity.
1. Peter Grego, Collision Earth (Blandford, 1998), 92.
2. Duncan Steel, Rogue Asteroids and Doomsday Comets (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1995), 222.
3. Grego, Collision Earth, 106.
4. Ibid.
5. Vershuur, Gerrit L., Impact!: the threat of comets and asteroids, 166
6. Steel, Rogue Asteroids and Doomsday Comets, 236.
7. Grego, Collision Earth, 79.
8. Ibid., 71.
9. Austen Atkinson, Impact Earth (Virgin, 1999), 81.
10. Steel, Rogue Asteroids and Doomsday Comets, 203-204.
11. Grego, Collision Earth, 101.
12. Atkinson, Impact Earth, 8.
13. Steel, Rogue Asteroids and Doomsday Comets, 40.
14. Ibid., 41.
15. “The Tunguska event,” http://web.utk.edu/~comet/papers/nature/TUNGUSKA.html.
16. Steel, Rogue Asteroids and Doomsday Comets, 44.
17. Vershuur, Gerrit L., Impact!: the threat of comets and asteroids, 166.
18. John & Mary Gribbin, Fire on Earth (Pocket Books, 1996), 37.
19. Atkinson, Impact Earth, 84.
20. Ibid., 3.
21. Ibid., 4.
22. Ibid., 6.

Super Volcanoes


There is nothing to suggest that any ancient civilization would have been able to predict volcanic eruptions thousands of years hence. Therefore the inclusion of this section is due to super-volcanoes fitting the global cataclysm category, and because we shouldn't rule out any possibilities, no matter how remote. Also, keep in mind that a pole shift type event might be predictable, and a pole shift could be the trigger for an eruption - so they don't necessarily happen in their own due course.

In general, if a global cataclysm triggers volcanic eruptions, active volcanoes presently exist on every continent except for Australia. But the type of volcano that can single-handedly harm the entire planet in a substantial manner is a super volcano.

What is a Supervolcano?

A supervolcano is an arbitrary definition for volcanoes that can have the largest of eruptions. It is such a recent term, the spelling of the word is not yet set in concrete, but we'll use the spelling most commonly used. While there is no precise measurement used to qualify a volcano as "super", the word is used to describe a volcano that can threaten global civilization. A supervolcano will either wipe out all of humankind, or make a very good attempt to do so.

It is the only local, natural event that has such power, and ranks alongside comets and asteroids as a force of nature we should fear.

Supervolcanoes tend to be active over millions of years. They erupt less frequently than other volcanoes, but when they do erupt, they are substantially more intense. They are rare enough to be missing from modern history, and we only know they have ever occured due to geological studies of the clues they have left for us.


Supervolcanoes of the Past

These are the largest supereruptions we are aware of - they all have a Volcanic Explosivity Index of 8 (VEI-8) which means they have thrown out at least 1,000 km³ Dense Rock Equivalent of ejecta. The level of ejecta is the most important criteria in terms of risk to the survival of our species. Local disasters will not affect our continued existence, but this level of ash in the atmosphere will create immense difficulties for the entire planet.

26,500 years ago - Lake Taupo, NZ - 1,170 km³

74,000 years ago - Lake Toba, Sumatra - 2,800 km³

254,000 years ago - Whakamaru, NZ - 1,200-2,000 km³

640,000 years ago - Yellowstone, USA - 1,000 km³


2.1 million years ago - Yellowstone, USA - 2,500 km³

2.5 million years ago - Cerro Galan, Argentina - 1,050 km³

4 million years ago - Atana Ignimbrite, Chile - 2,500 km³

4.5 million years ago - Yellowstone, USA - 1,800 km³

6.6 million years ago - Yellowstone, USA - 1,500 km³

27.8 million years ago - La Garita Caldera, USA - 5,000 km³


29.5 million years ago - Sam Ignimbrite, Yemen - 5,550 km³

As an indication of how massive these supereruptions were, Mt St Helens had just 1.2 km³ of ejecta, and Krakatoa had 25km³.

While it might be possible to discern eruption patterns for individual volcanoes, collectively it becomes much more random. Hopefully scientists will be able to forewarn us of the next one to blow.

How Bad Can a Supervolcano Be?

The supereruption of Toba caused temperatures to drop globally by between 3 and 9 degrees Farenheit, as much as 18 degrees in some places, killed 80-90% of humans and destroyed as much as three-quarters of all vegetation in the Northern Hemisphere. (1) Substantial amounts of ash were distributed across southern Asia. In India, the ash was typically six inches thick, and at one site it reached an extraordinary depth of twenty feet (2).

Tephra is the fragmental material created by a volcanic eruption. Different types of tephra are determined by size - anything larger than 2.5 centimetres is called a "bomb", and ash is the smallest. Volcanic ash is quite different to the ash you get from burining something. Because it is a fragment of glass or rock, it has sharp edges - if you breathe it in, you will damage your lungs. These tiny pieces will combine with the moisture in your lungs and form a type of cement.


The eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815 was minor compared to a supereruption, but serves as an example of the types of problems we could face. It ejected an estimated 36 cubic miles of ash and pumice, rising as much as 30 miles into the stratosphere. This cloud drifted around the world, visually affecting the atmosphere above both Europe and the USA. Many places suffered their worst winter on record. The winter at Yale University, in Connecticut USA, was 7°F below average. In Europe, food shortages were commonplace. Riots broke out, and armed groups looted farms. Ireland was worst hit, where the famine was believe to cause the spread of typhus, infecting 1.5 million people and killing 65,000. It was known as the Year Without Summer. In the last 600 years, only one year has been colder - 1601, following the eruption of a Peruvian volcano.

The famous Krakatoa eruption of 1883 caused a series of tsunamis, up to 100 feet in height, killing tens of thousands of people. The final explosion was defeaning, and was heard 3,000 miles away.

Research into some likely large eruptions from 6th century (El Chichon) and 13th century (Proto Krakatoa) suggest that they may have also caused famines, in each case leading to a wipespread plague outbreak, and possibly, in the case of the former, causing the Dark Ages.

Chlorine gases emitted can damage the ozone layer. On top of the damage we have already inflicted via CFCs, the eruption of a supervolcano could deplete the ozone layer to such an extent that it becomes another deadly side-effect. The increase in ultra-violet radiation would cause skin cancer in humans and damage crops.

The excellent Supervolcano, by Dr John Savino & Marie D. Jones, includes an in-depth, fictional account of a Long Valley supereruption. Based on current scientific understandings, it is compelling reading. Here's a brief excerpt:

Within days and weeks of the supereruption, the suspension of air routes, the inability to bring cargo in and out of the most deeply affected areas, and the virtual decimation of the Grain Belt, the area of our nation responsible for the vast majority of our grain food sources, all contribute to a growing sense of desperation and panic among survivors anxious to find food. It only takes 0.04 inches of ash to close airports, and the wide swath of blanketed ash would literally shut down every major and minor airport for thousands of miles across the country.


Because even a small amount of ash can clog an engine, road transportation is heavily curtailed, and trucks and machines normally engaged in the moving of supplies from one state to another find themselves immobilized. Electrical equipment shorts out, and wide areas experience power outages and rolling blackouts, rendering communication via computers and phones obsolete.

The description continues, pointing out the importance of short-wave radios. They tell of food riots and contaminated water, of violence and anarchy. Although the USA is the worst hit, the suffering is global. Greatly decreased food production means mass starvation and social unrest. It is a truly horrific scenario. While we can only hope and pray it does not happen in our lifetime, it will certainly happen one day. It would be extremely unlikely that mankind can ever tame even the smallest of volcanoes, so it would appear that a global catastrophe via a supervolcano is entwined in human destiny.

This map shows the extent of ash fall from the last three eruptions of Yellowstone:

Yellowstone Ash






















Candidates for a 2012 Eruption

We know of roughly 50 supervolcanoes that have ever existed, and most of those are now extinct. Others are believed to be dormant, while a few are currently active - listed here under their common names:

  • Toba (Sumatra, Indonesia) - supereruption 74,000 years ago, which was the largest volcanic eruption anywhere on Earth within the last 25 million years. Most humans did not survive this eruption, and in theory it caused a population bottleneck that may have contributed to our evolution, or at least our genetic makeup. Toba may have been active within the last several hundred years
  • Yellowstone (USA) - last erupted 630,000 years ago. It has been speculated that the force of a Yellowstone eruption would be the equivalent of one thousand Hiroshima bombs exploding per second (3)
  • Long Valley (California, USA) - last erupted 760,000 years ago (600 km³ of ejecta).
  • Valles Caldera (New Mexico, USA) - last erupted 1.15 million years ago (600 km³ of ejecta)
  • Lake Taupo (New Zealand) - supereruption just 26,500 years ago. Has erupted roughly every thousand years since, with the most recent, 1,800 years ago, being considered the largest in recorded history, 100x larger than Mt St Helens. Fortunately it was not recorded, for New Zealand was yet to be settled by humans.
  • Phlegraean Fields (Naples, Italy) - supererupted 39,000 years ago (500 km³ of ejecta), with other major eruptions since. Could have a major eruption within decades.

Active - but no evidence they are capable of wiping us out

  • Kikai Caldera (Japan) - supererupted 6,300 years ago. Still active, with minor eruptions occuring as recently as 2004
  • Laacher See (Germany) - potentially still active, erupted 12,900 years ago
  • Mount Tambora (Sumbawa, Indonesia) - last erupted in 1815, killing at least 71,000 people.
  • Aira (Japan) - erupted 22,000 years ago (400 km³ of ejecta), but is still very active. In 1914 an eruption caused the evacuation of 23,000 people. The city of Kagoshima is very close by.

Yellowstone

The Yellowstone caldera is an active place, and there are regular reports that could cause some people to be concerned. Unfortuanately, because we have only been monitoring this area for less than a century, it's impossible to tell whether the current activity is relatively normal, or if it is unusual and an indicator that something is up.

A 25 mile section of the caldera rose 5 inches between 1997 and 2003. Prior to this, the whole caldera has risen, fallen, risen, fallen. Between 1923 and 1975 it rose 3-4 feet. Geysers start and stop mysteriously. In an average year the region has thousands of earthquakes too small for people to feel underneath them.

Paranoid folk might want to keep their eye on the Yellowstone Webcam

Long Valley

Long Valley is rated by the U.S. Geological Survey as a bigger risk than Yellowstone. Magma is bubbling beneath the surface, and strong earthquakes are not uncommon - in 1980 it had four which measured 6 on the Richter Scale. Paoha Island in the neaby Mono Lake was created from an eruption just 350 years ago.

Phlegraean Fields


This caldera is also showing signs of unrest. Containing a large portion of the city of Naples, a supereruption similar to the one 39,000 years ago would devestate Europe. Since the late 60s the caldera has risen by 3 metres. Even more worrying, scientists are preparing to drill into the volcano, an act that some experts consider irresponsible, and could result in an eruption.

Recent comparisons

In early 2010 the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull caused weeks of travel chaos, due to airlines not willing to risk their engines by flying jets in zones that could be stricken with ash. In the greater scheme of things this is a minor volcano, yet it still manages to grind local air travel to a halt. A supervolcanic eruption would render us completely useless...

Government to the Rescue?

Two years prior to the Mt St Helens eruption of 1980, scientists predicted that an eruption would occur within 22 years. But would such information be made public about an imminent Yellowstone eruption? For example, if a study predicted an eruption in the next 10 years, the economic upheaval created by half of America relocating could be too much to bear. Leaders might choose to ignore the possibility and cross their fingers. Like they (unfortunately) did with New Orleans. Plenty of conspiracy theorists have discussed the possibility of governmental secrecy (at the Above Top Secret forum, the Yellowstone topic has over 600 pages of posts), but of course proof is lacking otherwise it would be fact, not theory.

Where is Safe?

The relative lack of volcanoes make Australia and southern Africa the places to be...

Having said that, Australia may not have any active volcanoes, but it did, and it will. The most recent eruptions occured in South Australia (5,000 years ago), Victoria (10,000 years ago) and Queensland (13,000 years ago). For millions of years the level of activity in Australia has been decreasing, but small eruptions are still likely in the future. See The Volcanic Earth by Lin Sutherland for details and maps of Australian volcanoes. It also includes future scenarios, and predicts that eruptions that could affect us would be small, with the main hazards being lava flow and bushfires. Australian eruptions would be a minor inconvenience compared to the climatic disturbances for Australia coming from supervolcanic eruptions elsewhere.


Resources

Some useful, official sites, for monitoring Yellowstone:

This official site describes actions to take in an ash fall situation :

http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/ash/todo.html

And one non-official site with plenty of info:

http://www.solcomhouse.com/yellowstone.htm


Sources

2012 Possibilities

2012 Possibilities

As 2012 approaches we have a growing list of what "experts" feel might occur. Despite the sincerity and long-winded explanations, it's all just guesswork. There is no scientific evidence that anything untoward will happen in 2012. All we have to suggest that 2012 will be any different to 2011 or 2013 is that the Mayan Long Count calendar ends on Dec 21, 2012. The Mayans themselves had almost nothing to say about what the end of the calendar held for humankind, and this suggests that they merely inherited the calendar from an earlier culture. In deciding which of the many possible calamities are more likely to wipe us out in 2012, the possibility of an ancient culture predicting such for 2012 must be taken into consideration.
12diggsdigg Here's my list of possibilities, ranked on 3 criteria; the relative odds of happening this century, of happening in 2012, and of the ancients being able to predict such a thing. Regarding aliens and a religious apocalypse, while I don't believe in these things personally, they are on the list due to the billions of folk that do believe in them


1.     Asteroid/Meteor/Comet - ancient, advanced civilisations have one distinct advantage over us - they may have observed the skies for longer, and may have spotted an orbit that will culminate in a collision with Earth in 2012. This is easily the most predictable disaster for 2012. With recent discussion of "dark comets", we have become aware of the possibility of our planet being struck with little or no warning. Read the full article on Comets and Asteroids
Possibility this century 9
Possibility in 2012 8
Could Ancients Predict It? 10
TOTAL 27



2.     Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) from our Sun - a CME was behind the solar storm of 1859. It occurred in September of that year, causing the failure of telegraph systems across North America and Europe. Accompanying the storm were auroras that are normally only seen in the Arctic and Antarctic, but were visible as far south as the Caribbean. Typically we would expect a storm of 1859's magnitude cause power blackouts and wreck satellites. But do we really know how big they can get? In 2009 NASA told us to be wary of solar storms, and warned of the dangers to America's ancient overloaded power grid. Being without power for a few months, in the developed world, is a lot more serious than most people realise.

Possibility this century 10
Possibility in 2012 8
Could Ancients Predict It? 6
TOTAL 24



3.     Magnetic Pole Shift - pole reversals have been happening on average once every 400,000 years, with the most recent one being 730,000 years ago - so we are well overdue. Not only do we not know much about reversals, scientists are still unsure about how our magnetic field is generated. Long thought to be a by-product of the movements of liquid iron in our planet's core, recent studies are suggesting that our salty oceans might be the cause. Scientists suggest a geomagnetic reversal takes thousands of years and does no harm. They are wrong - it could just as easily happen overnight. No mechanism is known for the cause of the magnetic poles swapping places. Our magnetic field is known to be rapidly declining (10% in the last 150 years), and the magnetic North pole is moving around at an accelerating pace - it has been predicted it will move from Canada to Siberia in the next 50 years. These changes could be indicating an imminent reversal.


Possibility this century 8
Possibility in 2012 7
Could Ancients Predict It? 7
TOTAL 22



4.     Explosion from the black hole at the center of our galaxy - in 1983 Dr Paul LaViolette described the dangers of a Galactic core explosion. He explained that it would generate a cosmic ray superwave, and it would be signalled by a gamma ray burst (see below). He also warned us that a gravity wave might travel ahead of the superwave. If seems likely that the 2004 tsunami was caused by a gravity wave, because the accompanying GRB arrived just 21 hours later, and was the brightest ever observed, 100 times brighter than any other seen in recorded history. This gravity wave did not come from our galactic center, but if it had, perhaps the effects would have been much worse.

Possibility this century 8
Possibility in 2012 7
Could Ancients Predict It? 6
TOTAL 21





5.     Religious Apocalypse - or rapture, or "judgement day". Most religions predict such a day. Conspiracy theorists suggest that many world leaders have apocalyptic beliefs, and may even be attempting to cause Biblical prophecy to be fulfilled in 2012 via their actions. If it helps, the Bible says “But of that day and hour knoweth no one, not even the angels of heaven, neither the Son, but the Father only.” But then again, maybe God changed his mind since the Bible was written, and told some people the date of the apocalypse? Maybe he told the ancient Mayans? Possibilities could be argued ad infinitum
Possibility this century 6
Possibility in 2012 6
Could Ancients Predict It? 8
TOTAL 20



6.     Alien Invasion - no evidence, but plenty of believers! Tied in with this are recent crop circles that have 2012 and Mayan themes. If aliens are the creators of crop circles, then one would expect the circles to be a warning of sorts.
Possibility this century 7
Possibility in 2012 6
Could Ancients Predict It? 7
TOTAL 20



7.     Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) - a 2004 study told us that a GRB from a distance of just one kiloparsec could destroy half of Earth's ozone layer. It suggests that historical mass extinctions may have been caused by GRBs. NASA explains how "gamma-ray radiation from a relatively nearby star explosion, hitting the Earth for only ten seconds, could deplete up to half of the atmosphere's protective ozone layer. Recovery could take at least five years. With the ozone layer damaged, ultraviolet radiation from the Sun could kill much of the life on land and near the surface of oceans and lakes, and disrupt the food chain."
Possibility this century 7
Possibility in 2012 7
Could Ancients Predict It? 5
TOTAL 19



8.     Crustal Displacement - a physical pole shift. The mechanism is not understood, and most theories are just wild guesses. However it seems quite likely we had one 12,000 years ago, and what goes around, comes around. Charles Hapgood provided substantial evidence for a pole shift at that time, and Allan and Delair have added to it in their book Cataclysm!: Compelling Evidence of a Cosmic Catastrophe in 9500 B.C. Take into account that Albert Einstein endorsed Hapgood's ideas, and we have something to worry about.
Possibility this century 6
Possibility in 2012 6
Could Ancients Predict It? 6
TOTAL 18



9.     Cosmic Rays - scientists have yet to work out where most high-energy cosmic rays come from. Either an increase striking our atmosphere, or a weakening of our shields, will let in more cosmic rays. They are already zipping through your body every second, and they could end up being our silent killers. As one example of their danger, airlines do not let pregnant women work on their inter-continental routes, because of the increased exposure to cosmic rays at those heights.
Possibility this century 8
Possibility in 2012 6
Could Ancients Predict It? 3
TOTAL 17



10.     Flu Pandemic - it might not be swine flu, but flu researchers say a deadly pandemic is not a case of if, but when. Our generation is generally unaware of how bad the pandemic of 1918 was - it killed 50 million people. It was the number one cause of death amongst soldiers in WW1. Being killed by the enemy came second.
Possibility this century 10
Possibility in 2012 6
Could Ancients Predict It? 1
TOTAL 17



11.     Nuclear War / WW3 / Biological War - although the Cold War is over, and fewer bunkers are being built, the threat is still very real. Tensions between the Koreas, and India & Pakistan are worrisome, as are the huge bunkers that the Russians have built. The Yamantau complex is large enough to protect 60,000 people!
Possibility this century 10
Possibility in 2012 5
Could Ancients Predict It? 2
TOTAL 17



12.     Supervolcano - these are real, they have caused great catastrophes in the past, and we have no idea when the next eruption will be. Some believe Yellowstone could explode again soon, as it has been exhibiting signs of unrest, with earthquake swarms, ground deformation and considerable heat and gas emissions. It it did erupt, expect half of the USA to be wiped out, and major variations in global climate for many years. For more information, watch documentaries by the BBC and Discovery Channel, and read my online article on SuperVolcanoes.
Possibility this century 7
Possibility in 2012 4
Could Ancients Predict It? 5
TOTAL 16



13.     Rise of the Machines - somewhere between Terminator and I Robot is an easy prediction: robots one day will have the capacity to rule the world. Are we stupid enough to allow it to happen?
Possibility this century 10
Possibility in 2012 2
Could Ancients Predict It? 2
TOTAL 14



14.     Global Warming - it will only take an increase of a couple of degrees to make life very difficult for most humans. Luckily for us, it is unlikely to wipe us out as early as 2012.
Possibility this century 9
Possibility in 2012 3
Could Ancients Predict It? 2
TOTAL 14



15.     Time Travel Error - someone from the future ventures into our past and causes a conflict in the time-space continuum... if it causes us harm in 2012, maybe someone managed to zip back in time and warn the ancients of it?
Possibility this century 6
Possibility in 2012 3
Could Ancients Predict It? 4
TOTAL 13



16.     Nanotechnology - while this might have health concerns when used in everyday products (ie sunscreen), the doomsday risk is when self-replicating little thingies are developed. Search for "grey goo". Fortunately 2012 seems too soon for some mad scientist to let the goo loose.
Possibility this century 9
Possibility in 2012 2
Could Ancients Predict It? 1
TOTAL 12



17.     Nearby Supernova - experts say that no supernova candidates are close enough to harm us. But how many supernovas have they observed? This is where, after the fact, scientists proclaim "but of course!"
Possibility this century 5
Possibility in 2012 4
Could Ancients Predict It? 3
TOTAL 12



18.     Genetic Modification - we blindly take vaccinations, and we might be sheep when it comes to "gene therapy" as well. Our desire to live longer might just be our undoing.
Possibility this century 8
Possibility in 2012 3
Could Ancients Predict It? 1
TOTAL 12



19.     Nuclear Accident - nothing is foolproof. We've had such accidents in the past, and a bigger accident is totally possible. Hard for the ancients to predict, though.
Possibility this century 8
Possibility in 2012 2
Could Ancients Predict It? 1
TOTAL 11



20.     Ice Age - right now the buzz is about "global warming", yet a mere thirty years ago we were worried about an impending Ice Age. There is evidence that parts of our climate system work more like a switch than a dial, and if a certain level of temperature is reached, it may cause what is known as "abrupt climate change". See the movie "The Day After Tomorrow" for how it might work.
Possibility this century 6
Possibility in 2012 1
Could Ancients Predict It? 2
TOTAL 9



21.     Solar System Falls Apart (butterfly effect) - to the best of our knowledge, everything is OK for a long, long time. However simulations have shown how Mercury could cause Earth and Mars to collide a few billion years from now. But throw a stray comet or Planet X into the mix, and our solar system could turn into a catastrophic pinball machine any old time.
Possibility this century 0
Possibility in 2012 0
Could Ancients Predict It? 4
TOTAL 4



22.     Large Hadron Collider - scientists tinkering with something they think they understand the risks of, but what if there's a 0.000001% chance their black hole calculations are wrong? Is it worth the risk? Originally we were told by CERN scientists that it was impossible for a black hole (that might gobble up the entire planet) to be created by the LHC, because it "would decay before it had the chance to do any damage". This has recently been updated to "the growth of black holes to catastrophic size does not seem possible.”
Possibility this century 1
Possibility in 2012 1
Could Ancients Predict It? 0
TOTAL 2