A fortnight or a month ago (maybe a little longer but not much longer) I dreamed about a situation in which I ended up under the sea and I couldn't get out.
The funny thing is that I wasn't afraid, there was another person there and we started talking while calmly swallowing sea water.
When I woke up I remembered the various psychics talking about the tsunami.
Curiously, I had a dream very much like yours several years ago. The C's have said that once the coming Earth changes have taken place, the world we know today will be unrecognisable. So, we may see areas that were above sea level inundated and areas that are today below the sea emerge as dry land again.
I recall that not so long ago the C's said to "watch Africa":
Q: (Joe) Just to promote global warming and climate change. So, they said the Turkey one was part of a sequence?
A: Yes. This year there will be more.
Q: (Joe) When you say "sequence", you don't necessarily mean in the same geographic region then?
A: No.
Q: (Joe) On the...
A: However, watch Africa.
Q: (Joe) Africa doesn't usually have quakes.
(Niall) The Great Rift? Somalia and the Horn of Africa...
You will observe that Niall refers to the Great Rift that runs through Ethiopia, Somalia etc. Laura has said that scientists such as geologists and climatologists tend to promote uniformitarianism rather than sudden cataclysmic changes. Well scientists have made a discovery recently that suggests there is an ocean forming under Africa and that eventually Africa will be split open and this new ocean will emerge:
A newly forming ocean may split Africa apart, scientists say
Story by Sharmila Kuthunur
A plume of molten rock deep beneath eastern Africa is pulsing upward in rhythmic surges, slowly splitting the continent apart and potentially marking the birth of a new ocean.
At least, that's what a team of researchers led by Emma Watts of the Swansea University in the U.K. recently discovered. More specifically, the scientists' new study found that the Afar region of Ethiopia is underlain by a plume of hot mantle that rises and falls in a repeated pattern, almost like "a beating heart." These pulses, the team says, are closely tied to overlying tectonic plates and play a key role in the slow rifting of the African continent.
"We found that the mantle beneath Afar is not uniform or stationary — it pulses, and these pulses carry distinct chemical signatures," Watts said in a statement. "That's important for how we think about the interaction between Earth's interior and its surface."
The Afar region, which covers the northeastern region of Ethiopia, is one of the few places on Earth where three tectonic rift systems meet — the Red Sea Rift, the Gulf of Aden Rift and the Main Ethiopian Rift. As the tectonic plates in this so-called "triple junction" are pulled apart over millions of years, the crust stretches, thins, and eventually breaks, signalling an early step in the formation of a new ocean basin. Geologists have long suspected that a plume of hot mantle lies beneath this region and helps drive the rifting process — but, until now, little was known about how that plume behaves.
To study what lies beneath, researchers collected over 100 volcanic rock samples from across Afar and the Main Ethiopian Rift. They combined this fieldwork with existing geophysical data and advanced statistical modelling to better understand the structure and composition of the crust and underlying mantle.
Their analysis revealed a single, asymmetric plume beneath the region, marked by repeating chemical patterns or "geological barcodes," according to the new study." The chemical striping suggests the plume is pulsing," study co-author Tom Gernon of the University of Southampton said in the statement. "In places where the plates are thinner or pulling apart faster, like the Red Sea Rift, those pulses move more efficiently — like blood through a narrow artery."
"We found that the evolution of deep mantle upwellings is intimately tied to the motion of the plates above," study co-author Derek Keir of the University of Southampton added in the same statement.
"This has profound implications for how we interpret surface volcanism, earthquake activity, and the process of continental breakup."
The team's study was published on June 25 in the journal Nature Geoscience.
See: MSN
But say if this process suddenly sped up as part of global earth changes. Indeed, I am aware that at least one seer during the 20th century had a vision of Africa opening up and the seas inundating land on both sides of the split. Many visionaries see what may well be possible futures, as the C's have said that the future remains open until it crystalises. However, if such an event does befall Africa in the near future (and let's hope it doesn't), we now at least know the mechanism that will be responsible.