The Future Landscape of Ontario!
(Acknowledged as the most controversial speculation on this site)
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In Ontario we sit in a fortunate position overall, we sit on some of the oldest rock formations on the surface of Earth, especially North of Orillia. This in addition to our cultural heritage and social identities means that surviving an extremely uncommon celestial phenomenon is very possible. In Canada as a testament straight from the 150th birthday of this great nation at Blue Mountain, I got the pleasure to eat and celebrate with people brought from far and wide over the last hundreds of years. All brought together with the understanding of a level of kind mutual unity that you don’t feel in all countries. Blessed are each and dam near likely everyone that is reading this, we are Canadian and no non terrestrial body’s taking us down.
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Risks to most regions around the world over the last decade as related to climate change have nearly reached their apex. Thankfully for us the dangers from sinkholes and rock movement is less likely to occur anywhere within the Ontario region as evident by the age and size of the Canadian Shield. These regions are not particularly vulnerable to many of the hardships felt throughout other regions of the planet as related to climate change. This in addition to further water displacement between James Bay, Lake Huron, and the Saint Lawrence splitting open will wreak some of Ontario’s worse destruction. Many houses are built in low laying areas and along Lake Ontario, some of which so vulnerable they will not be those who could benefit from preventive flooding measures. In addition to flooding, extreme wind and the potential for wide spread EMP exposure (Electromagnetic Pulse) are the greatest short term risks to life and liberty. In the long run, the lack of homes will result in the formation of camps with inadequate food storage.
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This map was created by the US Navy to demonstrate what USA will look like after the pole shift, or so my sources suggest.I have a personally made map at the end of the article, as a general example of the highest risk areas.
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So what will this mean for you and your family, well first and foremost? Flooding will take down the homes of probably about 2/3 of all Ontarians over the course of the next 8 years. Peak levels of the rising sea could occur in the range of 3-6 years from now. How do we know that, well in Antarctica we have nearly the entire west half of the continent about to split off due to geothermal heating. That displacement of water will wonder up the El Nino current in the short run. In the long run it will raise the sea level to roughly 225 Meters above the current level. This will effectively destroy human civilisation as it’s understood today; breeding new life into the story here on Earth.
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Starting with cities than major roadways, from the most southern locations Ontario locations transiting northward:
Location, high, low, outlook
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Windsor 200m, 175m, nearly completely lost due to rising sea levels
Welland 190m, 180m, likely gone unless the water forms a greater basin near by
Niagara Falls 200m, 180m, washed away infrastructure as well
Saint Catherine’s 180m, 80m, completely washed off the map
London Ontario, 280m, 230m, Overall London should be okay beyond flooding rivers
Hamilton 240m, 80m, Hamilton sits at the brunt of any sizeable quantity of water coming down the Saint Lawrence, It would be a bad place to be during the worst of the storms. But its upper houses should still have a hope of staying intact as the issue transitions to rising sea levels.
Cambridge, 300m, 260, should be fairly safe
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Kitchener, Waterloo, Guelph 380m, 300m, this area will be one of the main locations people evacuating the city will try to gather. People here will be among the least affected by the rising sea levels due to their central location away from the lakes and on significant elevation. This tells me food will be highly valued in this region in the next few years
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Milton, 230m, 180m, this area will be stuck in awe as it looks towards the city trying to debate if homeowners should move further inland. Your gut feeling will be equal to my guess in many of these critical decisions
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Oakville, 150m, 80, gone
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Mississauga, Toronto, Pickering, Oshawa, south parts of York, 190m, 80, primarily gone, maybe not all in the first major sweep, but gone all the same over the 4 year water expansion.
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Brampton, 240m, 190m, Brampton will be partially saved depending on where the river pours from Caledonia. Pure guess based on elevation, but the North West has the greatest chance to survive.
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Vaughn, Markham, 230m, 170m, another area where people will need to get lucky or find themselves trapped by water and debris.
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Richmond Hill, Aurora, Newmarket, 310m, 200m, this area will have a very good chance to survive and will serve as the second major gathering place for people vacating the city areas.
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Peterborough, 270m, 190m, this community will be fine after they transition from their current closeness to the Otonabee river.
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Bolton, 260m, 215m, primarily intact.
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Orangville, 450m, 400m, and property values skyrocket as this is one of safest places in southern Ontario prior to the anthropological adjustment variables.
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Schomberg, 240m, 220m, at moderate risk, flood preventive measures would be an asset.
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Tottenham, 270m, 230m, fairly safe compared to neighboring towns, low lying roads will see flooding damage and bridges out
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Beeton, 260m, 190m, primarily lost as a result of raising sea levels. New housing arrangements as well as
measures to assure crop production should be put into place now.
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Alliston, 230m, 210m, primarily lost
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Angus + Base Borden, 220m, 190m primarily lost.
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Barrie, 300m, 220m, a hub for the future, not all will be as lucky as those on top of the hill.
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Owen Sound, Wasaga Beach, Collingwood, 220m, 180m, Will likely be victimized by the raising lakes.
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Orillia, 280m, 210m, By the water will be lost as well as the east west passage, this area of the 400 should still be useable.
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Midland, Penetanguishene, 245m, 170m, the area to the east and along the north will be lost. This will limits access routes to the areas that aren’t put under water
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Sudbury, 330m, 220m, Local industry has done quite the number on the local life, so this although in the long run could become a larger hub. In the short run it will be the land of unpredictable currents for a while
North Bay, 355m, 200m, the bulk of the south will be lost along the rising lake and on the north should be safe due to their extreme elevation advantage.
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Thunder Bay, 285m, 185m, along Lake Superior will be swept away.
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Ottawa, 120m, 50m, completely devastated by the river that replaces the city
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Roadways
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Starting with the 401 from Windsor to Chatham Kent up to London.
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Most of the major routes sit under water for months and or years for a time in the coming years; this leaves me advising anyone south west of London to evaluate at least a worst case scenario plan as more climate anomalies become apparent to you. Sarnia and as I have said Windsor will be primarily destroyed.
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London to Brantford or Kitchener.
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The lower regions of Brantford will be lost, but not all areas south of Brantford, this flux will leave most trade and travel routes through Kitchener rather than the up and down through the south east of Brantford.
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Qew, from Saint Catherine’s to Toronto,
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Will be lost, as well as most routes out of Saint Catherine’s in the worst of the rising sea levels. I would advise anyone to leave the region if possible prior to the coming devastation.
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400 to Orillia
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North of 7 should be safe leaving up towards Orilla. However the 400 will be gone in parts of the Port Severn region including around areas of Coldwater. Hwy 17 could be the preferred method of travel
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89, 9, 11, airport road, all should be good
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26 has some gaps, as well as 90 and 27 should be okay for the most part
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The problem with most of these routes will be the structural integrity of bridges, if a bridge get’s taken out. People could easily become isolated for weeks or months at a time. Plan your routes to assets in the short and long run, to minimise the risk of being stuck in an emergency or as related to food.
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Things to avoid, radiation as exposed from Nuclear Power reactors once structural integrity is breached
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Pickering - 83m above sea level right on the shore.
Bruce, Tiverton, aka Sauble Beach Ontario 186m
Darlington, Bowmanville 78m
Gentilly-2 Bécancour, Québec
Point Lepreau, New Brunswick
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As someone who did many hours investigating into the Fukushima disaster, the desire to prevent further radiation from leaking into the environment is a top priority. Now I understand that Canada may have learned a thing or two and may use higher levels of preventative measures, to assure that none of our facilities are destroyed in a similar fashion to Fukushima. Despite the inland locations of the facilities listed above, each is close enough to water that a large enough wave could do enormous amounts of damage. The sheer magnitude of the pole shift leaves those in the know with the highest desire for diligent awareness and safety protocols. With this in mind I will try to highlight a few things about the potential movement of radioactive isotopes.
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Lesser concerns,
Chalk River has an advanced test facility reactor.
McMaster in Hamilton
Montreal- École Polytechnique de Montréal
Kingston Military College
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So based on our initial findings in red it’s fairly clear that Lake Huron and certainly Lake Ontario will have a fairly high chance for radiation exposure. The Ottawa Valley will also have a fair chance for radiation exposure in addition to the rushing currents, this map is located at the bottom of the page.
What does Radiation exposure look like on plants and animals, refer to the pictures below.
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Conclusion,
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Get to high ground, acquire as much food as possible, be ready to inject new practices into dealing with the homeless and starving. Lining yourself and your family up to be self sufficient is a good move, but don't let that isolate your from your neighbours who will also need help. A friend in need is a friend indeed, a stranger in need could become desperate enough for violence.
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If this article is a big shock for you, please contact me, and stay safe :)
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All elevations were acquired with
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http://www.dw.com/en/antarctica-larsen-c-breakoff-could-have-dire-consequences/a-39489181
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/west-antarctic-el-nino-melt-1.4162516
http://e360.yale.edu/digest/researchers-document-widespread-snowmelt-in-west-antarctica