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Powerful quake hits Japan. AlJazeeraEnglish on Mar 10, 2011 An 8.9-magnitude earthquake struck Japan's northeastern coast around 0546 GMT on Friday. It caused a four-metre tsunami in the port city of …More
Powerful quake hits Japan.
AlJazeeraEnglish on Mar 10, 2011 An 8.9-magnitude earthquake struck Japan's northeastern coast around 0546 GMT on Friday.
It caused a four-metre tsunami in the port city of Kamishi and its tremors shook buildings in the capital Tokyo, over 300 kilometres away.
Now Taiwan has issued a tsunami warning.
Irapuato
Crisis at Japan's nuclear plant gets worse
Japan's nuclear crisis appeared to be spinning out of control on Wednesday after workers withdrew briefly from a stricken power plant because of surging radiation levels and a helicopter failed to drop water on the most troubled reactor.In a sign of desperation, police will try to cool spent nuclear fuel at one of the facility's reactors with water cannon …More
Crisis at Japan's nuclear plant gets worse

Japan's nuclear crisis appeared to be spinning out of control on Wednesday after workers withdrew briefly from a stricken power plant because of surging radiation levels and a helicopter failed to drop water on the most troubled reactor.In a sign of desperation, police will try to cool spent nuclear fuel at one of the facility's reactors with water cannon, normally used to quell riots.
Early in the day, another fire broke out at the earthquake-crippled facility, which has sent low levels of radiation wafting into Tokyo in the past 24 hours, triggering fear in the capital and international alarm.
Japan's government said radiation levels outside the plant's gates were stable but, in a sign of being overwhelmed, appealed to private companies to help deliver supplies to tens of thousands of people evacuated from around the complex.
"People would not be in immediate danger if they went outside with these levels. I want people to understand this," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told a televised news conference, referring to people living outside a 30-km (18-mile) exclusion zone. Some 140,000 people inside the zone have been told to stay indoors.
The European Union's energy chief, Guenther Oettinger, told the European Parliament that the plant was "effectively out of control" after breakdowns in the facility's cooling system.
Workers cleared debris to build a road so fire trucks could reach reactor No. 4 at the Daiichi complex in Fukushima, 240 km (150 miles) north of Tokyo. Flames were no longer visible at the building housing the reactor.
High radiation levels prevented a helicopter from dropping water into the No. 3 reactor to try to cool its fuel rods after an earlier explosion damaged the unit's roof and cooling system.
The plant operator described No. 3 -- the only reactor at that uses plutonium in its fuel mix -- as the "priority." Plutonium, once absorbed in the bloodstream, can linger for years in bone marrow or liver and lead to cancer.
The situation at No. 4 reactor, where the fire broke out, was "not so good," the plant operator added, while water was being poured into reactors No. 5 and 6, indicating the entire six-reactor facility was now at risk of overheating.
"Getting water into the pools of the No.3 and No.4 reactors is a high priority," Hidehiko Nishiyama, a senior official at Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Administration, told a news conference, adding the pool for spent fuel rods at No. 3 was heating up while No.4 remained a concern.
"It could become a serious problem in a few days," he said.
A military helicopter may be used again to try to drop water and troops mobilized to help pump water by land, he said.
Nuclear experts said the solutions being proposed to quell radiation leaks at the complex were last-ditch efforts to stem what could well be remembered as one of the world's worst industrial disasters.
"This is a slow-moving nightmare," said Dr Thomas Neff, a physicist and uranium-industry analyst at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Japanese Emperor Akihito, delivering a rare video message to his people, said he was deeply worried by the country's nuclear crisis which was "unprecedented in scale."
"I hope from the bottom of my heart that the people will, hand in hand, treat each other with compassion and overcome these difficult times," the emperor said.
Panic over the economic impact of last Friday's massive earthquake and tsunami knocked $620 billion off Japan's stock market over the first two days of this week, but the Nikkei index rebounded on Wednesday to end up 5.68 percent.
Nevertheless, estimates of losses to Japanese output from damage to buildings, production and consumer activity ranged from between 10 and 16 trillion yen ($125-$200 billion), up to one-and-a-half times the economic losses from the devastating 1995 Kobe earthquake.
Damage to Japan's manufacturing base and infrastructure is also threatening significant disruption to the global supply chain, particularly in the technology and auto sectors.
CHINA SUSPENDS NUCLEAR PLANS
Scores of flights to Japan have been halted or rerouted and air travelers are avoiding Tokyo for fear of radiation. On Wednesday, both France and Australia urged their nationals in Japan to leave the country as authorities grappled with the world's most serious nuclear accident since the Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine in 1986.
Russia said it planned to evacuate families of diplomat on Friday.
In a demonstration of the qualms about nuclear power that the crisis has triggered around the globe, China announced that it was suspending approvals for planned plants and would launch a comprehensive safety check of facilities.
China has about two dozen reactors under construction and plans to increase nuclear electricity generation about seven-fold over the next 10 years.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said nuclear power was safe provided power stations were built in the right place and designed and managed properly. Russia ordered checks at nuclear facilities on Tuesday.
In Japan, the plight of hundreds of thousands left homeless by the earthquake and devastating tsunami that followed worsened following a cold snap that brought snow to worst-affected areas.
Supplies of water and heating oil are low at evacuation centers, where many survivors wait bundled in blankets.
"It's cold today so many people have fallen ill, getting diarrhea and other symptoms," said Takanori Watanabe, a Red Cross doctor in Otsuchi, a low-lying town where more than half the 17,000 residents are still missing.
While the official death toll stands at around 4,000, thousands are listed as missing and the number of dead is expected to rise.
At the Fukushima plant, authorities have spent days desperately trying to prevent water designed to cool the radioactive cores of the reactors from evaporating, which would lead to overheating and possibly a dangerous meltdown.
Until the heightened alarm about No.3 reactor, concern had centered on damage to a part of the No.4 reactor building, where spent rods were being stored in pools of water, and also to part of the No.2 reactor that helps to cool and trap the majority of cesium, iodine and strontium in its water.
Japanese officials said they were talking to the U.S. military about possible help at the plant.
Concern has mounted that the skeleton crews dealing with the crisis might not be big enough or were exhausted after working for days since the earthquake damaged the facility.
Authorities withdrew 750 workers for a time on Tuesday, briefly leaving only 50. All those remaining were pulled out for almost an hour on Wednesday because radiation levels were too high, but they were later allowed to return. By the end of the day, about 180 were working at the plant.
RADIATION IN TOKYO NOT A THREAT TO HUMAN HEALTH
In the first hint of international frustration at the pace of updates from Japan, Yukiya Amano, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said he wanted more timely and detailed information.
"We do not have all the details of the information so what we can do is limited," Amano told a news conference in Vienna. "I am trying to further improve the communication."
Several experts said the Japanese authorities were underplaying the severity of the incident, particularly on a scale called INES used to rank nuclear incidents. The Japanese have so far rated the accident a four on a one-to-seven scale, but that rating was issued on Saturday and since then the situation has worsened dramatically.
France's nuclear safety authority ASN said on Tuesday it should be classed as a level-six incident.
At its worst, radiation in Tokyo reached 0.809 microsieverts per hour on Tuesday -- 10 times below what a person would receive if exposed to a dental x-ray. For Wednesday, radiation levels were barely above average.
But many Tokyo residents stayed indoors. Usually busy streets were nearly deserted. Many shops and offices were closed.
Winds over the plant blew out toward the Pacific Ocean on Wednesday.
Japanese media have became more critical of Kan's handling of the disaster and have criticized the government and plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. for their failure to provide enough information on the incident.
Nuclear radiation is an especially sensitive issue for Japanese following the country's worst human catastrophe -- the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.
The full extent of the destruction was slowly becoming clear as rescuers combed through the tsunami-torn region north of Tokyo where officials say at least 10,000 people were killed.
There have been hundreds of aftershocks and more than two dozen were greater than magnitude 6, the size of the earthquake that severely damaged Christchurch, New Zealand, last month -- powerful enough to sway buildings in Tokyo.
About 850,000 households in the north were still without electricity in near-freezing weather, Tohuku Electric Power Co. said, and the government said at least 1.5 million households lack running water. Tens of thousands of people were missing.
(Additional reporting by Nathan Layne, Linda sieg, Risa Maeda, Isabel Reynolds, Dan Sloan and Leika Kihara in Tokyo, Chris Meyers and Kim Kyung-hoon in Sendai, Taiga Uranaka and Ki Joon Kwon in Fukushima, Noel Randewich in San Francisco, and Miyoung Kim in Seoul; Writing by Jason Szep. Editing by John Chalmers, Dean Yates and Ron Popeski).
news.yahoo.com/…/us_japan_quake
elisabethvonthüringen
Japan: Epizentrum nahe bei Marienerscheinungsort
Das Bebenzentrum befindet sich nahe der Stadt Yuzawa, wo Maria als Unsere Liebe Frau von Akita 1973 vor weltweiten Katastrophen gewarnt hat

Niigata (kath.net) Das Epizentrum der derzeitigen Erdbeben in Japan befindet sich nahe einem Marienerscheinungsort, wo die Jungfrau Maria 1973 vor Naturkatastrophen gewarnt hat, die noch größer seien als die …More
Japan: Epizentrum nahe bei Marienerscheinungsort

Das Bebenzentrum befindet sich nahe der Stadt Yuzawa, wo Maria als Unsere Liebe Frau von Akita 1973 vor weltweiten Katastrophen gewarnt hat


Niigata (kath.net) Das Epizentrum der derzeitigen Erdbeben in Japan befindet sich nahe einem Marienerscheinungsort, wo die Jungfrau Maria 1973 vor Naturkatastrophen gewarnt hat, die noch größer seien als die bereits geschehenen, wenn die Menschheit sich nicht bekehre. Seherin war die Ordensschwester Agnes Sasagawa.

1973 erschien die Jungfrau Maria der Ordensfrau drei Mal. Kardinal Ratzinger untersuchte 1988 den Fall und akzeptierte das Urteil des Ortsbischofs, dass die Erscheinungen und die Botschaften für die Gläubigen annehmbar sind. Die Botschaften warnten vor Verwirrung innerhalb der Kirche und Katastrophen, die die ganze Welt betreffen könnten, wenn es zu keiner Umkehr komme.

Am 11. März verursachte ein schweres Erdbeben der Stärke 8,8 in Japan einen verheerenden Tsunami. Das Epizentrum liegt in der nordjapanischen Diözese Sendai. Die Stadt Sendai ist etwa 150 Kilometer entfernt von dem Wallfahrtsort Unserer Lieben Frau von Akita in der Stadt Yuzawa.
Irapuato
Japan abandons stricken nuke plant over radiation By ERIC TALMADGE and SHINO YUASA, Associated Press Eric Talmadge And Shino Yuasa, Associated Press – 7 mins ago FUKUSHIMA, Japan – Japan suspended operations to prevent a stricken nuclear plant from melting down Wednesday after a surge in radiation made it too dangerous for workers to remain at the facility. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said …More
Japan abandons stricken nuke plant over radiation By ERIC TALMADGE and SHINO YUASA, Associated Press Eric Talmadge And Shino Yuasa, Associated Press – 7 mins ago FUKUSHIMA, Japan – Japan suspended operations to prevent a stricken nuclear plant from melting down Wednesday after a surge in radiation made it too dangerous for workers to remain at the facility. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said work on dousing reactors with water was disrupted by the need to withdraw. The level of radiation at the plant surged to 1,000 millisieverts early Wednesday before coming down to 800-600 millisieverts. Still, that was far more than the average "So the workers cannot carry out even minimal work at the plant now," Edano said. "Because of the radiation risk, we are on standby." Experts say exposure of around 1,000 millisieverts is enough to cause radiation sickness. Earlier officials said 70 percent of fuel rods at one of the six reactors at the plant were significantly damaged in the aftermath of Friday's calamitous earthquake and tsunami. News reports said 33 percent of fuel rods were also damaged at another reactor. Officials had said they would use helicopters and fire trucks to spray water in a desperate effort to prevent further radiation leaks and to cool down the reactors. The nuclear crisis has triggered international alarm and partly overshadowed the human tragedy caused by Friday's double disaster, which pulverized Japan's northeastern coastline, killing an estimated 10,000 people. Authorities have tried frantically since the earthquake and tsunami to avert an environmental catastrophe at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex in northeastern Japan, 170 miles (270 kilometers) north Tokyo. The government has ordered some 140,000 people in the vicinity to stay indoors. A little radiation was also detected in Tokyo, 150 miles (240 kilometers) to the south and triggered panic buying of food and water. There are six reactors at the plant, and three that were operating at the time have been rocked by explosions. The one still on fire was offline at the time of the magnitude 9.0 quake, Japan's most powerful on record. The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency estimated that 70 percent of the rods have been damaged at the No. 1 reactor. Japan's national news agency, Kyodo, said that 33 percent of the fuel rods at the No. 2 reactor were damaged and that the cores of both reactors were believed to have partially melted. "We don't know the nature of the damage," said Minoru Ohgoda, spokesman for the country's nuclear safety agency. "It could be either melting, or there might be some holes in them." Meanwhile, the outer housing of the containment vessel at the No. 4 unit erupted in flames early Wednesday, said Hajimi Motujuku, a spokesman for the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co. Japan's nuclear safety agency said fire and smoke could no longer be seen at Unit 4, but that it was unable to confirm that the blaze had been put out. news.yahoo.com/s/ap/as_japan_earthquake ___
,Jaimemn
Look Ricardo Silva, if we take your name and make two polynomial with the cubic root of neperian logarithms of the numerical values of letters in Koine Greek and divide them, after doing a convolution and the Laplace transform of the result, we get exactly 11!
Ah ha! you are a disinformation agent Iluminati just trying to confuse the Gloria TV people!
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Olha Ricardo Silva, o seu nome, se …More
Look Ricardo Silva, if we take your name and make two polynomial with the cubic root of neperian logarithms of the numerical values of letters in Koine Greek and divide them, after doing a convolution and the Laplace transform of the result, we get exactly 11!

Ah ha! you are a disinformation agent Iluminati just trying to confuse the Gloria TV people!

------

Olha Ricardo Silva, o seu nome, se formarmos dois polinônio com os os logaritimos neperianos do raiz cúbica dos valores numéricos das letras em grego Koiné e dividirmos os dois, após uma convolução e fazendo a transformada de laplace do resultado, obteremos exatamente 11!

Ah ha! você é um agente de desinformação Iluminati que só está querendo criar confusão no Gloria TV!
Ricardo Silva
✍️
Ólha, eu to me perguntando ja ha varios dias uma observacao muito estranha que póde nao ter nada a ver, mas que é curioso é.
O terremoto no Japao aconteceu justamente no dia 11 de 2011, como em Nova York os ataques as torres gemeas acontecerao no dia 11 de Setembro de 2001, exatos 10 anos antes, e as torres gemeas olhadas de longe formava o numero 11.
E como o número 11 é muito utilizado pelos …More
✍️
Ólha, eu to me perguntando ja ha varios dias uma observacao muito estranha que póde nao ter nada a ver, mas que é curioso é.
O terremoto no Japao aconteceu justamente no dia 11 de 2011, como em Nova York os ataques as torres gemeas acontecerao no dia 11 de Setembro de 2001, exatos 10 anos antes, e as torres gemeas olhadas de longe formava o numero 11.
E como o número 11 é muito utilizado pelos iluminates como acinatura oculta.
E sabendo que muitos paises inclusive o brasil estao desenvolvendo esses progetos chamado "haarp". O HAARP (sigla em inglês para Programa de Pesquisa Auroral Ativo de Alta Freqüência) é um projeto do governo americano que visa estudar as altas camadas da atmosfera ( especialmente a ionosfera) para melhorar as telecomunicações e entender melhor as mudanças climáticas.
Consiste em um gigantesco complexo de antenas no Alaska , que emitem ondas de rádio concentradas para alguns pontos da ionosfera ( camada eletrificada que fica a cerca de 70 km de altitude).
Essas ondas eletromagnéticas aquecem a ionosfera e depois são refletidas de volta para a Terra, em qualquer posição.
As ondas que retornam têm grande comprimento, por isso, penetram profundamente nos oceanos e até abaixo da superfície rochosa do Planeta.
A comunicação com submarinos nucleares em grandes profundidades ficou mais fácil. Até aí tudo bem.
O problema é que toda essa energia irradiada para a ionosfera pode ser manipulada para causar transformações climáticas em qualquer ponto do planeta. Inclusive gerando terremotos.
O HAARP, portanto, pode ser usado como uma grande arma climática global.
Com ele, os americanos poderiam, por exemplo, causar um furacão em qualquer região do mundo.
Sei que isso está parecendo teoria da conspiração, mas vários cientistas renomados vem alertando há anos para essa possibilidade.
Os mais exaltados falam até em controle mental de seres humanos em vastas regiões povoadas. Não sei se chega a tanto, mas não acho muito inteligente confiarmos cegamente nas boas intenções da nação mais poderosa do planeta.
Entao como eu disse no Começo, embóra eu acho que posso estar errado, mas nao seria isso a causa do terremoto no japao seguido de um tsuname gigantesco, pois as datas coincidem
Fique de olho.
Ricardo Silva
🤦
Mira, yo me pregunto desde hace varios días una observación muy extraño que puede no tener nada que hacer, pero lo curioso es.
El terremoto ocurrido en Japón en tan sólo 11 días de 2011, como los atentados de las torres gemelas de Nueva York se llevará a cabo el 11 de septiembre de 2001, exactamente 10 años antes, y las torres gemelas parecía formado ahora el número 11.
Y como el número 11…More
🤦
Mira, yo me pregunto desde hace varios días una observación muy extraño que puede no tener nada que hacer, pero lo curioso es.
El terremoto ocurrido en Japón en tan sólo 11 días de 2011, como los atentados de las torres gemelas de Nueva York se llevará a cabo el 11 de septiembre de 2001, exactamente 10 años antes, y las torres gemelas parecía formado ahora el número 11.
Y como el número 11 es de uso frecuente por los Illuminati como acinatura ocultos.
Y a sabiendas de que muchos países, incluyendo Brasil son el desarrollo de estas tentativamente llamado "HAARP". HAARP (abreviatura de Investigación de Aurora Activa de Alta Frecuencia Programa) es un proyecto de gobierno de los EE.UU. destinada a estudiar las capas altas de la atmósfera (sobre todo la ionosfera) para mejorar las telecomunicaciones y comprender mejor el cambio climático.
Se trata de un enorme complejo de antenas en Alaska, que emiten ondas de radio se concentró a unos pocos puntos de la ionosfera (la capa que electrificadas es de unos 70 km de altitud).
Estas ondas electromagnéticas calentar la ionosfera y luego de rebote a la Tierra, en cualquier posición.
Las ondas que regresan son muy largas, por lo que penetra profundamente en los océanos, e incluso por debajo de la superficie rocosa del planeta.
La comunicación con submarinos a gran profundidad se hizo más fácil. Hasta aquí todo bien.
El problema es que toda esta energía radiada en la ionosfera pueden ser manipulados para causar el cambio climático en cualquier parte del planeta. Incluyendo la generación de los terremotos.
HAARP, por lo tanto puede ser utilizado como un arma climáticos globales grande.
Con él, los norteamericanos podrían, por ejemplo, causar un huracán en cualquier parte del mundo.
Sé que esto es como la teoría de la conspiración, pero varios científicos destacados de alerta ha sido durante años esta posibilidad.
Los más exaltados incluso se habla de control mental de los seres humanos en las grandes zonas pobladas. No sé, el fichero es tan lejos, pero no muy inteligente supongo confiar ciegamente en las buenas intenciones de la nación más poderosa de la tierra.
Así que como dije al principio, aunque creo que puedo estar equivocado, pero no sería la causa del terremoto en Japón, seguidos por un enorme tsunami, porque las fechas son similares
No pierdas de vista.
One more comment from Ricardo Silva
Ricardo Silva
🤦
Look, I'm wondering has for several days a very strange observation that may have nothing to do but what is curious is.
The earthquake happened in Japan in just 11 days of 2011, as the attacks in New York twin towers will take place on September 11, 2001, exactly 10 years earlier, and the twin towers looked far formed the number 11.
And as the number 11 is often used by Illuminati as acinatura …More
🤦
Look, I'm wondering has for several days a very strange observation that may have nothing to do but what is curious is.
The earthquake happened in Japan in just 11 days of 2011, as the attacks in New York twin towers will take place on September 11, 2001, exactly 10 years earlier, and the twin towers looked far formed the number 11.
And as the number 11 is often used by Illuminati as acinatura hidden.
And knowing that many countries including Brazil are developing these tentatively called "HAARP". HAARP (abbreviation for Active Auroral Research Program High Frequency) is a U.S. government project aimed at studying the high layers of atmosphere (especially the ionosphere) to improve telecommunications and better understand climate change.
It consists of a huge complex of antennas in Alaska, which emit radio waves concentrated to a few points of the ionosphere (which electrified layer is about 70 km altitude).
These electromagnetic waves heat the ionosphere and then bounce back to Earth, at any position.
The returning waves are very long, so it penetrates deep into the oceans and even below the rocky surface of the planet.
Communication with submarines at great depths became easier. So far so good.
The problem is that all this energy radiated into the ionosphere can be manipulated to cause climate change anywhere on the planet. Including generating earthquakes.
HAARP can therefore be used as a weapon big global climate.
With it, the Americans could, for example, cause a hurricane anywhere in the world.
I know this is like conspiracy theory, but several leading scientists has been warning for years that possibility.
The most exalted even talk of mental control of human beings in large populated areas. I do not know it gets that far, but not very intelligent guess blindly trust the good intentions of the most powerful nation on earth.
So as I said in the beginning, although I think I may be wrong, but it would not be the cause of the earthquake in Japan followed by a massive tsunami, because the dates are similar
Keep your eye.
Irapuato
Third explosion rocks Japanese nuclear plant By ERIC TALMADGE and MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Eric Talmadge And Mari Yamaguchi, Associated Press – Tue Mar 15, 12:26 am ET SOMA, Japan – Japan's nuclear crisis deepened dramatically Tuesday. As safety officials sought desperately to avert catastrophe, the government said radioactive material leaking from reactors was enough to "impact human health …More
Third explosion rocks Japanese nuclear plant By ERIC TALMADGE and MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Eric Talmadge And Mari Yamaguchi, Associated Press – Tue Mar 15, 12:26 am ET SOMA, Japan – Japan's nuclear crisis deepened dramatically Tuesday. As safety officials sought desperately to avert catastrophe, the government said radioactive material leaking from reactors was enough to "impact human health" and the risk of more leaks was "very high." In a nationally televised statement, Prime Minister Naoto Kan said that radiation has spread from four reactors of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Fukushima province that was one of the hardest-hit in Friday's 9.0-magnitude earthquake and the ensuing tsunami. He urged anyone within 19 miles (30 kilometers) of the plant to stay indoors or risk getting radiation sickness. "The level seems very high, and there is still a very high risk of more radiation coming out," Kan said. A cascade of three explosions at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex was set in motion when last Friday's quake and tsunami knocked out power, crippling the cooling systems needed to keep nuclear fuel from going into full meltdown. The latest blast was early Tuesday in the plant's Unit 2 near a suppression pool, which removes heat under a reactor vessel, plant owner Tokyo Electric Power Co. said. Shigekazu Omukai, a spokesman for Japan's nuclear safety agency, said the nuclear core was not damaged but that the bottom of the surrounding container may have been. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said a fourth reactor at the complex was on fire and more radiation had been released. "Now we are talking about levels that can damage human health. These are readings taken near the area where we believe the releases are happening. Far away, the levels should be lower," he said. "Please do not go outside. Please stay indoors. Please close windows and make your homes airtight. Don't turn on ventilators. Please hang on your laundry indoors," he said. "These are figures that potentially affect health, there is no mistake about that," he said. Japanese officials had previously said radiation levels at the plant were within safe limits, and international scientists said that while there were serious dangers, there was little risk of a catastrophe like Chernobyl in Ukraine, where the reactor exploded and released a radiation cloud over much of Europe. Unlike the plant in Japan, the Chernobyl reactor was not housed in a sealed container to prevent the release of radiation. Japanese authorities have been injecting seawater as a coolant of last resort, and advising nearby residents to stay inside to avoid contamination. "It's like a horror movie," said 49-year-old Kyoko Nambu as she stood on a hillside overlooking her ruined hometown of Soma, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) from the plant. "Our house is gone and now they are telling us to stay indoors. "We can see the damage to our houses, but radiation? ... We have no idea what is happening. I am so scared." Earlier blasts Monday and Saturday injured 15 workers and military personnel and exposed up to 190 people to elevated radiation. Officials said those explosions had been linked to the venting of buildups of steam at two of the troubled reactors and that they had not compromised their inner containers. The nuclear woes compounded challenges already faced by the Tokyo government as it dealt with twin disasters that flattened entire communities and left as many as 10,000 or more dead. It also raised global concerns about the safety of nuclear power at a time when it has seen a resurgence as an alternative to fossil fuels. The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency said the Japanese government has asked the agency to send experts to help. Japan's meteorological agency reported one good sign. It said the prevailing wind in the area of the stricken plant was heading east into the Pacific, which would help carry away any radiation. news.yahoo.com/…/as_japan_earthq…;_ylt=AqyZm5lu8j7pG0NN26ILJ71v24cA;_ylu=X3oDMTNtOThwcjEyBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTEwMzE1L2FzX2phcGFuX2VhcnRocXVha2VfbnVjbGVhcl9jcmlzaXMEY2NvZGUDbXBfZWNfOF8xMARjcG9zAzIEcG9zAzIEc2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yaWVzBHNsawN0aGlyZGV4cGxvc2k-
Irapuato
Missionary Priest Killed in Japan Quake Sendai Bishop Unharmed SENDAI, Japan, MARCH 14, 2011 (Zenit.org).- A Canadian missionary priest was counted among the 1,800 casualties of Friday's 9.0 magnitude earthquake and resulting tsunami in Japan. Father Andre Lachapelle of the Quebec Foreign Mission Society died in Sendai, the city closest to the epicenter of the quake that hit 80 miles off the coast …More
Missionary Priest Killed in Japan Quake Sendai Bishop Unharmed SENDAI, Japan, MARCH 14, 2011 (Zenit.org).- A Canadian missionary priest was counted among the 1,800 casualties of Friday's 9.0 magnitude earthquake and resulting tsunami in Japan. Father Andre Lachapelle of the Quebec Foreign Mission Society died in Sendai, the city closest to the epicenter of the quake that hit 80 miles off the coast of Japan and sent a 33-foot tsunami inland. Father Peter Shiro Komatsu, chancellor of the Sendai Diocese, noted that the 76-year-old priest suffered a fatal shock from the disaster. Father Guy Charbonneau, superior general of the mission society, reported that the "intense motion" of the earthquake gave the priest a heart attack as he traveled from the Sendai cathedral back to his parish in Shiogama. The superior noted that the 10 other missionaries from his society serving in Japan are safe and "working with their own parishioners on spiritual-related" issues. Father Lachapelle, who is from Saint-Jacques-de-Montcalm, Quebec, has been serving in Japan since 1961. A friend, Father Florent Vincent, said that the missionary went to that country "to help people to be free, and to have happiness," CTV reported. "I believe he is in heaven, and he can see us," Father Vincent said. "He can help us from heaven, to inspire us to do good things for people, help people." Father Lachapelle will be buried in Japan among the people he served. Father Komatsu also reported that Bishop Martin Tetsuo Hiraga of Sendai was unharmed, but the situation around the diocese is still unknown. www.zenit.org/article-32015
One more comment from Irapuato
Irapuato
Japan’s earthquake shifted balance of the planet
By Liz Goodwin liz Goodwin Mon Mar 14, 9:56 am ET
Last week's devastating earthquake and tsunami in Japan has actually moved the island closer to the United States and shifted the planet's axis.The quake caused a rift 15 miles below the sea floor that stretched 186 miles long and 93 miles wide, according to the AP. The areas closest to the epicenter …More
Japan’s earthquake shifted balance of the planet
By Liz Goodwin liz Goodwin Mon Mar 14, 9:56 am ET

Last week's devastating earthquake and tsunami in Japan has actually moved the island closer to the United States and shifted the planet's axis.The quake caused a rift 15 miles below the sea floor that stretched 186 miles long and 93 miles wide, according to the AP. The areas closest to the epicenter of the quake jumped a full 13 feet closer to the United States, geophysicist Ross Stein at the United States Geological Survey told The New York Times.

The world's fifth-largest, 8.8 magnitude quake was caused when the Pacific tectonic plate dived under the North American plate, which shifted Eastern Japan towards North America by about 13 feet (see NASA's before and after photos at right). The quake also shifted the earth's axis by 6.5 inches, shortened the day by 1.6 microseconds, and sunk Japan downward by about two feet. As Japan's eastern coastline sunk, the tsunami's waves rolled in.
Why did the quake shorten the day? The earth's mass shifted towards the center, spurring the planet to spin a bit faster. Last year's massive 8.8 magnitude earthquake in Chile also shortened the day, but by an even smaller fraction of a second. The 2004 Sumatra quake knocked a whopping 6.8 micro-seconds off the day.
After the country's 1995 earthquake, Japan placed high-tech sensors around the country to observe even the slightest movements, which is why scientists are able to calculate the quake's impact down to the inch. "This is overwhelmingly the best-recorded great earthquake ever," Lucy Jones, chief scientist for the Multi-Hazards project at the U.S. Geological Survey, told The Boston Herald.
The tsunami's wavesnecessitated life-saving evacuations as far away as Chile. Fisherman off the coast of Mexico reported a banner fishing day Friday, and speculated that the tsunami knocked sealife in their direction.
news.yahoo.com/…/japans-earthqua…
alinalotte
Johannes Friede(1204-1257): " When the great time will come,in which mankind will face it last ,hard trial,it will be foreshadowed by striking changes in nature.The alterations between cold and heat will become more intense,storms will have more catastrophic effects,,earthquakes will destroy great regions,and the seas will overflow many lowlands.Not all of it will be the result of natural causes,…More
Johannes Friede(1204-1257): " When the great time will come,in which mankind will face it last ,hard trial,it will be foreshadowed by striking changes in nature.The alterations between cold and heat will become more intense,storms will have more catastrophic effects,,earthquakes will destroy great regions,and the seas will overflow many lowlands.Not all of it will be the result of natural causes,but mankind will penetrate into the bowels of earth and will reach into clouds gambling with its own existance. Before the powers of destruction will succeed in their own design the universe will be thrown into disorder,and the age of iron will plunge into nothingness.When the nights will be filled with more intense cold and days with heat,a new life will begin in nature.The heat means radiating from the earth,the cold the waining light of the sun.Only a few years more and you will become aware that sunlight has grown percepyibly weaker.When your artificial light will ceaseto give service,the great event in the heavens will be near." ✍️
Irapuato
Woman Predicted 03/11 Earthquake on 03/08 (video)
Friday, March 11, 2011 7:41
Source: vigilantcitizen.com
"I am not an expert on the subject, I am not sure about everything she is saying…but, darnit, she was right. This video was posted on YouTube on March 8th."
beforeitsnews.com/…/Woman_Predicted…More
Woman Predicted 03/11 Earthquake on 03/08 (video)
Friday, March 11, 2011 7:41

Source: vigilantcitizen.com

"I am not an expert on the subject, I am not sure about everything she is saying…but, darnit, she was right. This video was posted on YouTube on March 8th."
beforeitsnews.com/…/Woman_Predicted…
Irapuato
Earthquake Aftermath: From California to Chile, Residents Fight the Waves
Note: This information is constantly changing, so head to Time.com or CNN's live blog for up-to-the-minute updates.
(More on TIME.com: See pictures of the quake in Japan)
Read more: newsfeed.time.com/…/earthquake-afte…More
Earthquake Aftermath: From California to Chile, Residents Fight the Waves
Note: This information is constantly changing, so head to Time.com or CNN's live blog for up-to-the-minute updates.
(More on TIME.com: See pictures of the quake in Japan)

Read more: newsfeed.time.com/…/earthquake-afte…
One more comment from Irapuato
Irapuato
10K dead in Japan amid fears of nuclear meltdowns SENDAI, Japan – The estimated death toll from Japan's disasters climbed past 10,000 Sunday as authorities raced to combat the threat of multiple nuclear reactor meltdowns and hundreds of thousands of people struggled to find food and water. The prime minister said it was the nation's worst crisis since World War II. Nuclear plant operators worked …More
10K dead in Japan amid fears of nuclear meltdowns SENDAI, Japan – The estimated death toll from Japan's disasters climbed past 10,000 Sunday as authorities raced to combat the threat of multiple nuclear reactor meltdowns and hundreds of thousands of people struggled to find food and water. The prime minister said it was the nation's worst crisis since World War II. Nuclear plant operators worked frantically to try to keep temperatures down in several reactors crippled by the earthquake and tsunami, wrecking at least two by dumping sea water into them in last-ditch efforts to avoid meltdowns. Officials warned of a second explosion but said it would not pose a health threat. Near-freezing temperatures compounded the misery of survivors along hundreds of miles (kilometers) of the northeastern coast battered by the tsunami that smashed inland with breathtaking fury. Rescuers pulled bodies from mud-covered jumbles of wrecked houses, shattered tree trunks, twisted cars and tangled power lines while survivors examined the ruined remains. One rare bit of good news was the rescue of a 60-year-old man swept away by the tsunami who clung to the roof of his house for two days until a military vessel spotted him waving a red cloth about 10 miles (15 kilometers) offshore. The death toll surged because of a report from Miyagi, one of the three hardest hit states. The police chief told disaster relief officials more than 10,000 people were killed, police spokesman Go Sugawara told The Associated Press. That was an estimate — only 400 people have been confirmed dead in Miyagi, which has a population of 2.3 million. According to officials, more than 1,400 people were confirmed dead — including 200 people whose bodies were found Sunday along the coast — and more than 1,000 were missing in Friday's disasters. Another 1,700 were injured. For Japan, one of the world's leading economies with ultramodern infrastructure, the disasters plunged ordinary life into nearly unimaginable deprivation. Hundreds of thousands of hungry survivors huddled in darkened emergency centers that were cut off from rescuers, aid and electricity. At least 1.4 million households had gone without water since the quake struck and some 1.9 million households were without electricity. While the government doubled the number of soldiers deployed in the aid effort to 100,000 and sent 120,000 blankets, 120,000 bottles of water and 29,000 gallons (110,000 liters) of gasoline plus food to the affected areas, Prime Minister Naoto Kan said electricity would take days to restore. In the meantime, he said, electricity would be rationed with rolling blackouts to several cities, including Tokyo. "This is Japan's most severe crisis since the war ended 65 years ago," Kan told reporters, adding that Japan's future would be decided by its response. In Rikuzentakata, a port city of over 20,000 virtually wiped out by the tsunami, Etsuko Koyama escaped the water rushing through the third floor of her home but lost her grip on her daughter's hand and has not found her. "I haven't given up hope yet," Koyama told public broadcaster NHK, wiping tears from her eyes. "I saved myself, but I couldn't save my daughter." A young man described what ran through his mind before he escaped in a separate rescue. "I thought to myself, ah, this is how I will die," Tatsuro Ishikawa, his face bruised and cut, told NHK as he sat in striped hospital pajamas. Japanese officials raised their estimate Sunday of the quake's magnitude to 9.0, a notch above the U.S. Geological Survey's reading of 8.9. Either way, it was the strongest quake ever recorded in Japan, which lies on a seismically active arc. A volcano on the southern island of Kyushu — hundreds of miles (kilometers) from the quake' epicenter — also resumed spewing ash and rock Sunday after a couple of quiet weeks, Japan's weather agency said. Dozens of countries have offered assistance. Two U.S. aircraft carrier groups were off Japan's coast and ready to help. Helicopters were flying from one of the carriers, the USS Ronald Reagan, delivering food and water in Miyagi. Two other U.S. rescue teams of 72 personnel each and rescue dogs arrived Sunday, as did a five-dog team from Singapore. Still, large areas of the countryside remained surrounded by water and unreachable. Fuel stations were closed, though at some, cars waited in lines hundreds of vehicles long. The United States and a several countries in Europe urged their citizens to avoid travel to Japan. France took the added step of suggesting people leave Tokyo in case radiation reached the city. Community after community traced the vast extent of the devastation. In the town of Minamisanrikucho, 10,000 people — nearly two-thirds of the population — have not been heard from since the tsunami wiped it out, a government spokesman said. NHK showed only a couple concrete structures still standing, and the bottom three floors of those buildings gutted. One of the few standing was a hospital, and a worker told NHK that hospital staff rescued about a third of the patients. In the hard-hit port city of Sendai, firefighters with wooden picks dug through a devastated neighborhood. One of them yelled: "A corpse." Inside a house, he had found the body of a gray-haired woman under a blanket. A few minutes later, the firefighters spotted another — that of a man in black fleece jacket and pants, crumpled in a partial fetal position at the bottom of a wooden stairwell. From outside, while the top of the house seemed almost untouched, the first floor where the body was had been inundated. A minivan lay embedded in one outer wall, which had been ripped away, pulverized beside a mangled bicycle. The man's neighbor, 24-year-old Ayumi Osuga, dug through the remains of her own house, her white mittens covered by dark mud. Osuga said she had been practicing origami, the Japanese art of folding paper into figures, with her three children when the quake stuck. She recalled her husband's shouted warning from outside: "'GET OUT OF THERE NOW!'" She gathered her children — aged 2 to 6 — and fled in her car to higher ground with her husband. They spent the night in a hilltop home belonging to her husband's family about 12 miles (20 kilometers) away. "My family, my children. We are lucky to be alive," she said. "I have come to realize what is important in life," Osuga said, nervously flicking ashes from a cigarette onto the rubble at her feet as a giant column of black smoke billowed in the distance. As night fell and temperatures dropped to freezing in Sendai, people who had slept in underpasses or offices the past two nights gathered for warmth in community centers, schools and City Hall. At a large refinery on the outskirts of the city, 100-foot (30-meter) -high bright orange flames rose in the air, spitting out dark plumes of smoke. The facility has been burning since Friday. The fire's roar could be heard from afar. Smoke burned the eyes and throat, and a gaseous stench hung in the air. In the small town of Tagajo, also near Sendai, dazed residents roamed streets cluttered with smashed cars, broken homes and twisted metal. Residents said the water surged in and quickly rose higher than the first floor of buildings. At Sengen General Hospital, the staff worked feverishly to haul bedridden patients up the stairs one at a time. With the halls now dark, those who can leave have gone to the local community center. "There is still no water or power, and we've got some very sick people in here," said hospital official Ikuro Matsumoto. Police cars drove slowly through the town and warned residents through loudspeakers to seek higher ground, but most simply stood by and watched them pass. In the town of Iwaki, there was no electricity, stores were closed and residents left as food and fuel supplies dwindled. Local police took in about 90 people and gave them blankets and rice balls, but there was no sign of government or military aid trucks. news.yahoo.com/…/as_japan_earthq…
Ricardo Silva
Sacred heart of Mary, is the salvation of Japan
and worldwide
😇More
Sacred heart of Mary, is the salvation of Japan
and worldwide

😇
elisabethvonthüringen
Message of 26th June, 2010, given at Borg in-Nadur
Eucharistic Phenomena at Borg in Nadur
(From the onset of the apparition, the Lady came with a thick and knotted rope in her hands).
My dear children, and my children – the ones of my heart! This is for Fr Hayden to pass on to the people and to the world.
Yes, my children, today – as Angelik noticed and saw me – I came once more with a knotted …More
Message of 26th June, 2010, given at Borg in-Nadur

Eucharistic Phenomena at Borg in Nadur

(From the onset of the apparition, the Lady came with a thick and knotted rope in her hands).

My dear children, and my children – the ones of my heart! This is for Fr Hayden to pass on to the people and to the world.

Yes, my children, today – as Angelik noticed and saw me – I came once more with a knotted rope in my hands and am trying to undo them. I have already loosened many of them, my children.

And yet, my children, today I wished to speak to you about some countries that are not far from you and that are linked to you as well. These countries have cast my Son Jesus aside, my children, cast him aside totally. They have drawn the line between the world and heaven. They have separated him from their life. They are totally disinterested in him. They believe themselves to be self-sufficient. Alas, these counties are going to face a great fiasco, my children. They have already begun to feel it. They are already feeling their economy collapse. If they are going to go on this way, indeed, my children, disaster looms over Europe – financial disaster. It is simple: if you were to remove a fish from the water, what would happen to it? It would die. If these countries continue to remove my Son Jesus, what is going to happen?

You, my children, are to be the ones to convey this message, indeed, with urgency. Convey it to the whole world. Convey it by means of newspapers. Convey it on the internet, so that all will know what I am saying by means of Angelik, and so that you may be my messengers.

Divorce has come into Europe, abortion has come in, all is ruined, my children. Do you not see where the pulse of Europe is beating? Therefore arise and proclaim everything yourselves. Fear not, my children, for I shall be with you.

Tonight also I promise you that I shall be here and care for you. Offer up this rosary-chain of tonight and tomorrow, offer it up for those who are casting my Son Jesus aside, that they may realize their error, for my Son Jesus is sending me here for you and for them also, that I may open your eyes.

Thank you for having listened to my call
marthe2010
Dear Japanese, we pray for you!
alinalotte
@ NO FEAR OF THE LORD : St Senanus Prophecy ( 6 th Century) : " The clergy of the holy church will be addicted to pride and injustice.Women will abandon feelings of delicacy and cohabit with men out of wedlock ." St Anthony ,the ABBOT(4 th Century): "Men will surrender to the spirit of that age.They will say that ,if they lived in our day,faith would be simple and easy.But in their day,they will …More
@ NO FEAR OF THE LORD : St Senanus Prophecy ( 6 th Century) : " The clergy of the holy church will be addicted to pride and injustice.Women will abandon feelings of delicacy and cohabit with men out of wedlock ." St Anthony ,the ABBOT(4 th Century): "Men will surrender to the spirit of that age.They will say that ,if they lived in our day,faith would be simple and easy.But in their day,they will say,things are complex,the Church must be brought up to date and made meaningful to the day's problems.When the Church and the world are one,then those days are at hand."
Irapuato
NO FEAR OF THE LORD: Anti-Catholic students protest at university chapel in Madrid-Several females from the group stood on the altar, undressed from the waist up.
www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/anti-catholic-s…
Photos:
www.religionenlibertad.com/articulo.asp
Irapuato
Japan earthquake prediction:www.youtube.com/watch
Russia Warns of Mega Quake in March 2011
See also:
www.dailymail.co.uk/…/Japan-earthquak…