Question:
How are people in the East Anglia region coping with the late news of a 10 ft tidal wave?
snikleback
2007-11-08 12:13:21 UTC
How are people in the East Anglia region coping with the late news of a 10 ft tidal wave?
I live in Northampton,so am pretty sure it won't affect me but my heart goes out to people living in the Norfolk area especially as my nan lives in Downham market and lives in a bungalow.
Eighteen answers:
Simmo
2007-11-08 12:16:37 UTC
They're probably all having sex with their brothers and sisters to pass the time.
charlie
2007-11-08 20:28:15 UTC
From where im sat,Downham shouldnt have a problem if the nar copes with the rush.St germans flood pumps are on and rocking, Watlington is on gate alert,as is Setch run off Hilgay may pose a problem but Denver sluice is on close down.Welney is the main problem as is the river Downham to Wisbech OK

Edit snikleba any doubts post again and will do my best to update
2007-11-08 20:21:31 UTC
I really pray that the people of the East Coast of England will be ok. I also hope that Northampton will be OK as my sister lives there and she was affected when Peterborough flooded a few years back and they opened the flood gates to allow water to flow away from the city and also downhill! Northampton was flooded in a bad way, they have built flood defence now but fingers x.



My prayers are with them at High tide.
2007-11-08 20:25:27 UTC
lets hope its not to bad but its seems as if its all down the east coast they are talking of 10 foot waves we live on the east coast and the sea goes right though here the haven so we are keeps our ears open for the flood warning
Milking maid
2007-11-08 21:26:07 UTC
Just read this on Y news:

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/pressass/20071108/tuk-tidal-surge-sparks-flood-warning-6323e80_3.html

Apparently they have extended the warnings to North-east, East and South coasts.

Good luck and be safe everyone.
2007-11-08 20:41:53 UTC
apprehensive if my fella is owt to go by, the problem is that so many rivers are connected, and the broads are massive so it could hit further inland than people think. i hope they learnt from the flooding in the summer and move all the stuff they can upstairs just to be safe.
2007-11-08 20:21:43 UTC
have answered this one already and will again



it could be devastating for evryone in that area, looking at a prediction that most of north kent and southern essex could be flooded, and parts of East london.



In Beckton there is a major Gas installation, which if flooded could explode, it would be worse than the flood itself, could kill thousands.
rozy
2007-11-08 21:25:50 UTC
hope everything blows over..i.m in nottinghamshire and STILL trying to sort things and get back to any kind of normality after june 25th.s mess..luckily i was insured..but still got a long way to go before everythings fixed...i get nervous just listening to the weather forcasts these days
2007-11-08 20:35:05 UTC
Pretty aprehensive. Its due about 7am tomorrow so ask

me then.

Its blowing a gale here now, I know I won't get any sleep tonight

Thanks for your concern.
SUE G online
2007-11-08 20:25:20 UTC
i live on the east coast of yorkshire, dont know if its going to effect us or not or whether its further down the country
2007-11-08 20:20:27 UTC
ts news to me!!!

hope your nans bungalow escape undamaged!

I live in East Anglia

lol shows how much attention i pay to the news



Shambo i thought Essex was in East Anglia!
itsjustme
2007-11-08 20:35:25 UTC
I haven't heard the news to be honest with you, will it be on teletext do you know.
2007-11-08 20:34:30 UTC
lol at lorelei,



they dont do that anymore, not since the roads were layed,they can now travel to meet non relatives for that kind of relations.
dances
2007-11-08 20:18:16 UTC
I'm not bothered as i live on a hill, its about 1 mile from the river so I think i will be ok

but my ex husband lives in the flood area-every cloud has a silver lining eh? lol
2007-11-08 20:21:21 UTC
very, very, nervous I should think, lets hope it just by-passes and leaves no damage
2007-11-08 20:53:23 UTC
Me i would make the most of it



http://ie.youtube.com/watch?v=AlPqL7IUT6M
steve j
2007-11-08 20:22:11 UTC
The risk of a landslide in the Canary Islands causing a tidal wave (tsunami) able to devastate America's east coast is vastly overstated.

That is the view of marine geologists studying ancient landslides in the area.



In typical Canary Island landslides, chunks of land break off in bits, not in one dramatic plunge, they argue.



This contradicts previous warnings that an Isle of Man-sized chunk of land could fall off the island of La Palma into the sea, causing a mega-tsunami.



However, the researchers behind the original claim are sticking to their guns, pointing to evidence of catastrophic past events in the region.



'Worst-case scenario'



Back in 1999, scientists at University College London published a paper about a volcano on the island of La Palma. They predicted that, if it erupted, the volcano could cause a landslide in which a massive chunk of land fell into the ocean.



They then proposed that a landslide this big would generate a mighty tsunami big enough to cross the Atlantic, devastating the Caribbean and the eastern seaboard of the US.



If you break [a brick] up into 10 pieces and drop them in one by one you're going to get 10 much smaller splashes



Russell Wynn, Southampton Oceanography Centre

With talk of a possible wall of water 50m high, their predictions were jumped on by the world's media.



But researchers taking part in a three-week research cruise aboard Southampton Oceanography Centre's research ship, the RRS Charles Darwin, say the threat is far lower than previous warnings would suggest.



Doug Masson, who has been researching Canary Islands landslides for 20 years, says the models are a worst-case scenario.



Coring equipment is being used to collect samples of rock sediment deposited by underwater avalanches that were in turn caused by previous landslides on La Palma.





Researchers on board the RRS Charles Darwin say the threat is far lower than previous warnings would suggest

By looking at layering in the sediments, the scientists can work out whether the debris landed on the ocean floor in one big lump or in several smaller stages. And the Southampton researchers say that other samples from the Canaries suggest their "bit-by-bit" scenario is common, if not ubiquitous to these landslides.



Russell Wynn, who is leading the research cruise, says it means there is a lot less to worry about if a landslide is triggered.



"If you take a brick and drop it in a bath you're going to generate quite a big splash.



"But if you break the brick up into 10 pieces and drop them in one by one you're going to get 10 much smaller splashes".



Melting rock



None of this impresses the team that proposed the original mega-tsunami theory. Bill McGuire is director of the Benfield Hazard Research Centre at University College London. He argues that evidence on the surface of the Canary Islands shows that previous landslides have been catastrophic.



On the island of El Hierro, a semi-circular escarpment of rock left behind after a landslide is covered in melted rock. Conclusive evidence, says Bill McGuire, of a dramatic event.



"This thing moved so quickly that it heated the rock through friction and melted it. That is a catastrophic event," he said.



Other evidence that Canary Islands landslides have had a colossal impact has come from the Bahamas themselves where boulders of rock have been discovered 20m above sea-level.



How they got there was a mystery until the timing of their deposition was linked to a past landslide - in the Canaries. Many scientists now believe that landslides in the past have triggered deadly mega-tsunamis.



So Bill McGuire is sticking to the predictions his team have made. Making no apology for backing a worst-case model, he says: "There's no question of hiding things. If you're planning for any future disaster you're not going to consider the least disastrous scenario, you're going to consider the most."



When Southampton's marine geologists return to the UK, they hope to bring with them evidence that landslides in the Canary Islands are more gradual events.
?
2007-11-08 20:22:01 UTC
I hope the village of Loddon is wiped out


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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