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4 days before the
hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans I had a
dream I was on the steps of an unfamiliar building
in a city I did not recognize. Suddenly what
appeared to be seawater poured into the area. It was
about four feet deep and flooding rapidly. Last
night I had another dream. I believe I was in town
at the local High School. There is a baseball field
there and the school is up the hill a bit. In the
dream it appeared a bit different than it does now.
I noticed there were people up the hill in strange
looking dark gray or black uniforms scattered about.
People had gathered there for some sort of event I
assume. Just as I made a comment to someone standing
next to me about the uniforms, “at least they aren’t
the same old Nazi uniforms they used in world war
two," a wave of water came in from the southeast; it
was about a twenty to thirty footer and crashed over
the playing field. Something made me turn around. As
I looked around a wave close to 200 feet high was
engulfing us from the east. As it passed over we
were all under water. However, the water was full of
people, many more than from our town. There were
literally so many people in the water I could not
swim to the surface for the people. I then woke up
and prayed to remember the dream and for
interpretation and then went back to sleep.
This is what I
believe it means: First we (N. Florida) will have a
storm surge of 20 to 30 feet in the Gulf of Mexico.
It will be followed by a tsunami of around 200 feet
on the eastern seaboard. Not many people will drown
in the first because in the dream I saw many people
evading the first and smaller wall of water.
However, when the second larger wall of water comes
thousands, maybe millions, will drown, because in
the dream the water was literally full of people. It
appears this will happen when we see people in those
strange uniforms. I feel the second wave may relate
to these verses:
{Rev.8:8} And the second angel sounded, and as it
were a great mountain burning with fire was cast
into the sea: and the third part of the sea became
blood; {8:9} and there died the third part of the
creatures which were in the sea, [even] they that
had life; and the third part of the ships was
destroyed.
Here is a related
snippet from a BBC article I found on the web today:
huge landslides and the mega-tsunami that they cause
are extremely rare - the last one happened 4,000
years ago on the island of Réunion. The growing
concern is that the ideal conditions for just such a
landslide - and consequent mega-tsunami - now exist
on the island of La Palma in the Canaries. In 1949
the southern volcano on the island erupted. During
the eruption an enormous crack appeared across one
side of the volcano, as the western half slipped a
few metres towards the Atlantic before stopping in
its tracks.
You
can read the complete article at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2000/mega_tsunami.shtml.
I would like everyone to pray about this also to see
if the Lord may give them further clarification or
if necessary correction on the meaning of this. I
feel sure this was from the lord because it was like
the first dream that came before the hurricane
hit. Also, I am not certain this is for the future
because the other one came to pass so rapidly after
I had it. I think it is because I have not seen
those uniforms yet. I believe the ball field
represents where the game is played or the area that
will be hit. I was never in fear in the dream of
drowning myself even though I was at the bottom of a
sea of people when I woke up. I also can’t rule out
that the first wave was not a tsunami as well
because it was a nice sunny day at the ball field.
If these waves come this far inland it is
unimaginable because I am 60 miles from the gulf and
150 miles from the eastern seaboard -- about 3 miles
from lake Seminole.
La Palma, Canary
Islands
Location: 28.6N, 17.9W Elevation: 7,957 feet (2,426 m)
Space Shuttle photo
STS074-085-092 taken in September 1992
and looking east across La Palma.
Compare to the map below.
La Palma is a
stratovolcano, and is the largest of the
western Canary Islands. It stretches 21,320
ft (6500 m) above the surrounding ocean
floor. Two main rock layers separated by a
line about 1400 feet (427 m) above sea level
make up La Palma. The lower layer is made of
pillow lavas cut by basaltic dikes. The
thickness of the pillow lavas range from 33
to 1150 ft (10 to 350 m). Most of the dikes
are located within ~2 miles (3 km) of the
west coast. The upper layer consists of
basaltic lavas and
pyroclastic rocks. Small alkalic domes
have pushed their way into this area. Strong
erosion of the island over time is shown by
hundreds of meters of gravel mixed in with
basaltic lava flows. The oldest volcanic
rocks on La Palma are about 3-4 million
years of age.
Simplified
geology of La Palma. Thick gray
dashed line shows the location of a
rift zone proposed by Carracedo
(1994). Taburiente and Cumbre Nueva
are calderas. The landward scarps of
these calderas may mark the
headwalls of giant landslides.
La Palma has
seven historic eruptions, the most
recent in 1971 from the Teneguia
vent. Other vents formed in historic
time include Tahuya, a cone of
lapilli, scoria and bombs about
3,000 feet tall (1,000 m) tall that
formed over a three month period in
1585 by Strombolian eruptions and
San Martin, a cone and crater that
formed over two and a half months in
1646. The eruption at San Martin
produced large amounts of lapilli
and also sent four lava flows down
to the ocean. Recent craters and
eruptive vents are located along a
central line. A large canyon drains
the
calderas to the southwest.
Space Shuttle
photo
STS74-0736-0041.
The object in
the upper left
portion of the
picture is part
of the space
station MIR.
Sources of
Information:
Carracedo, J.C.,
1994, The Canary
Islands: an example
of structural
control on the
growth of large
oceanic-island
volcanoes. J.
Volcanology and
Geothermal Research,
v. 60, p. 225-241.
Neumann van
Padang, M.,
Richards, A.F.,
Machado, F.,
Bravo, T.,
Baker, E., Le
Maitre, W.,
1967, Part XXI,
Atlantic Ocean:
Catalogue of the
active volcanoes
of the world,
International
Association of
Volcanology,
Rome, Italy, 128
p.
Rothe,
Peter,
"Canary
Islands--Origin
and
Evolution,"
Die
Naturwissenschaften,
61, pp.,
526-533,
December,
1974.
Schmincke,
Hans-Ulrich
and
Staudigel,
Hubert,
"Pillow
lavas on
central
and
eastern
Atlantic
Islands,"
Bull.
Soc.
geol.
France,
pp.
272-278,
1976.
Schmincke,
Hans-Ulrich,
"The
Pliocene
Series
of
La
Palma/Canary
Islands,"
Journal
of
Geophysical
Research,
vol.
89,
n.
B13,
pp
11,195-11,215,
Dec.
10,
1984.
Simkin, T., and Siebert, L., 1994, Volcanoes of the World: Geoscience Press, Tucson, Arizona, 349 p.