Destruction of Los Angeles: Difference between revisions

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Combined with the danger of existing fault lines that Los Angeles sits on, the potential for a devestating natural disaster is scientifically plausible.   
Combined with the danger of existing fault lines that Los Angeles sits on, the potential for a devestating natural disaster is scientifically plausible.   


Time Magazine[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,867597,00.html] recorded the partial sinking of Long Beach in the 1950s, blaming the cause on excessive drilling in the area.  Since that time, oil producers have been pumping water into the earth to replace the oil they extract.  The only problem with this process is that water has different properties than oil, as residents of Daisetta, Texas learned in 2008 when the walls of an underground salt-cave (from which oil brine had been extracted) disolved, creating a sink-hole 900 feet wide by 260 feet deep.[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,354501,00.html]  Between 1932 and 1960 iodine was harvested from oil brine extracted in the Los Angeles basin - raising the question of whether the water being pumped into the earth is currently disolving structural minarals under Los Angeles.   
Time Magazine[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,867597,00.html] recorded the partial sinking of Long Beach in the 1950s, blaming the cause on excessive drilling in the area.  Since that time, oil producers have been pumping water into the earth to replace the oil they extract.  The only problem with this process is that water has different properties than oil, as residents of Daisetta, Texas learned in 2008 when the walls of an underground salt-cave (from which oil brine had been extracted) disolved, creating a sink-hole 900 feet wide by 260 feet deep.[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,354501,00.html]  Between 1932 and 1960 iodine was harvested from oil brine extracted in the Los Angeles basin - raising the question of whether the water being pumped into the earth is currently disolving structural minerals under Los Angeles.   


One problem with subsistence (the sinking of land) is that it can create megatsunamis if they occur near water. History records the following megatsunamis created by landslides:
One problem with subsistence (the sinking of land) is that it can create megatsunamis if they occur near water. History records the following megatsunamis created by landslides: