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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Monday, September 16, 2024

In November of 2020, a freak wave came out of the blue, lifting a lonesome buoy off the coast of British Columbia 17.6 meters high (58 feet). The four-story wall of water was finally confirmed in February 2022 as the most extreme rogue wave ever recorded at the time.

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... Such an exceptional event is thought to occur only once every 1,300 years. And unless the buoy had been taken for a ride, we might never have known it even happened.

For centuries, rogue waves were considered nothing but nautical folklore. It wasn't until 1995 that myth became fact. On the first day of the new year, a nearly 26-meter-high wave (85 feet) suddenly struck an oil-drilling platform roughly 160 kilometers (100 miles) off the coast of Norway.

At the time, the so-called Draupner wave defied all previous models scientists had put together.

Since then, dozens more rogue waves have been recorded (some even in lakes), and while the one that surfaced near Ucluelet, Vancouver Island was not the tallest, its relative size compared to the waves around it was unprecedented. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-09-16 12:37 AM | Reply

... and then there is this ...

An Unidentified Seismic Object' Shook Earth for Nine Days -- Now We Know What It Was
www.scientificamerican.com

... To put the tsunami in context, that 200-metre wave was double the height of the tower that houses Big Ben in London and many times higher than anything recorded after massive undersea earthquakes in Indonesia in 2004 (the Boxing Day tsunami) or Japan in 2011 (the tsunami which hit Fukushima nuclear plant).

It was perhaps the tallest wave anywhere on Earth since 1980. ...




#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-09-16 12:42 AM | Reply

A subduction event wasn't even recorded that might indicate whom created this "anomaly".

It's a mystery.

#3 | Posted by redlightrobot at 2024-09-16 01:24 PM | Reply

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