cocos (1)

10957977852?profile=original"One of Costa Rica’s most important tourist attractions in the the Zona Sur (Southern Zone), the Tómbolo de Punta Uvita, has disappeared following last Friday’s 9 magnitude earthquake."

Well, the world wasn't shocked by any means.  I didn't even find out about it for two months and then just happened to stumble across it in an unlikely source, but here it is, a second sign that coastlines are having troubles (several Japanese towns have high tides rolling through their streets now).  And it wasn't the Austral-Indonesian plate moving either.  Costa Rica is in Central America, on the Panama plate, which is sandwiched between the Cocos Plate on the west and the Nazca Plate on the south, and the Caribbean plate to the north/northeast.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panama_Plate

It made me wonder if the vision I had last year of the tsunami roaring toward the West Coast of South America will be caused by Japan sinking, in part or in whole.  Something similar has been examined in regards to a landslide caused by volcanic activity in the Canary Islands, which would cause a tsunami speeding toward the US East Coast.  See http://www.rense.com/general13/tidal.htm.

 

The rest of the article is here:  http://ticotimes.ca/?p=998

"Experts of the Obvservatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa Rica (OVSICORI) – Costa Rica’s volcanology and seismic institute – believe that the tsunami caused by the earthquake increased tides and possibly a drop in the sea floor.The Tómbolo or the “cola de ballena” (whale’s tail), is a stretch of sandy beach located in the Parque Marino Ballena in Punta Uvita that visitors, during low tide, of the area can walk from the mainland out to sea almost one kilometre.However, since Friday morning residents of the area and confirmed by experts, the level of water covers most of the Tómbolo even at low tide and the only way to reach the tail is by swimming out to it.


"And the tail itself is about half submerged in the water and almost completely during high tide."
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