Pressure spikes were reported by weather stations all around the world, including in China, Australia, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, and the United States. Watch as the Tonga volcano unleashed once-in-a-century planetary shockwave.
A visually stunning depiction of how an underwater volcano adjacent o tthe Pacific island country of Tonga burst in January, unleashing a once-in-a-generation planet wide shockwave.
Ángel Amores, a physical oceanographer at the Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies in Majorca, Spain, created the shockwave simulation, which was published in the New York Times.
Amores first noticed the shockwave after seeing the wave’s radar signature while analyzing data from local weather stations. When the shockwave hit, he claimed, dramatic pressure shifts were seen at meteorological stations all over the world.
The shockwave, according to Peter W. Brown, a physicist at the University of Western Ontario, traversed the globe multiple times at the velocity of sound. The occurrence was “super spectacular.” he stated.
Here’s a map showing weather stations across Japan that experienced an increase in air pressure as the shockwave approached.
Pressure spikes were reported by weather stations all around the world, including in China, Australia, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, and the United States. “The shockwave caused small disturbances in local atmospheric properties such as the temperature of water vapor, creating faint ripples that could be seen in satellite images.” the New York Times said.
So, what will cause the next planetary shockwave? Is it going to be another volcanic eruption, an asteroid, or a nuclear weapon?
In answer to your question: So, what will cause the next planetary shockwave? None of the above! All of these events are precipitated by the sun, as, very notably the one on Nov. 30, 2020. That the geologists, meteorologists, volcanologists, etc… cannot see a cause and effect relationship is only because they are not looking. You cannot see if you don’t look.