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04:08 PM
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Strange Bubbles in the Bayou??? Houses moving
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[quote:ladyannie2009:MV8xOTEyNTI4XzMxOTkzOTM0XzdGQ0E1QzJG] [quote:gabelmom:MV8xOTEyNTI4XzMxOTkzODAyX0JDNDZDMEVF] WOW.. this is from two years ago!! Massive gas bubble underground could explode causing a tsnuami http://www.politicsdaily.com/2010/06/21/could-gulf-oil-leak-lead-to-methane-bubble-tsunami-bp-responds/ [/quote] :gasp: note the speed of the tsunami wave they estimate if this burst---hundreds---plural :shocked: <snip from OP link> The frightening "low-probability" scenario described today by entrepreneur and philanthropist DK Matai at The Huffington Post includes the possibility of a "massive bubble trapped for thousands of years under the Gulf of Mexico sea floor" exploding and setting off a "[b]tsunami[/b] [traveling] at a high speed of[b] hundreds of miles per hour[/b]." [b] Florida might be most exposed to the fury of a tsunami wave. The entire Gulf coastline would be vulnerable, if the tsunami is manifest. Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama [/b]and southern region of Georgia might experience the effects of the tsunami according to some sources. He also warns of a "second tsunami via vaporization." This could result after the initial explosion displaced all the oil, gas and water around it, producing a gigantic, extremely hot (300-degree Fahrenheit) cavity, which would vaporize all the incoming water, turning it into steam and causing another rupture in the gulf floor. He notes that [b]as time goes on and the gulf well remains unplugged, the "risk increases." [/b] [/quote]
Original Message
Anybody have a clue? If it's not busted pipes, then what is causing it??
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