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Survivalisme>Survivre matériellement>Zones à risques / Zones sûres>Russie

Première version: 2014-10-27
Dernière version: 2018-12-19

Russie

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Russia, which is in the main in frozen northlands, will be pleasantly surprised to find itself in a warmer climate. In the center of a plate, the earthquakes will not be as long lasting as along faults, and the aftershocks minimal. Thereafter, the real threat for Russia will creep up upon the survivors. Siberia is low land, and the melting poles will swallow this land within months. Russia, in the main, is lowland which will shortly be flooded after the shift. Those hapless Russians who have not heard of the pending pole shift, and the melting of the poles to shortly follow the shift, will find themselves getting soggy, then flooded, with rain waters and overflowing rivers and streams that simply do not drain any longer. At first, in the lowlands, residents will move to hill tops, then tree tops, and then fashion boats out of anything that can float. However, given the broad expanse that will be inundated, there will be nowhere to go! Survivors will step away from the rising water into higher and higher ground, but find themselves eventually stranded on a diminishing island, with no land in sight! Without a sense of direction, and with north and south now west and east, compasses will be no guide, and the stars will not be visible in the main due to volcanic dust.

Those who would survive for the long term are advised to position themselves near high land. We would

advise those who are not near mountains or highland, such as the Urals, to fashion boats early and plot a course, sighting familiar landmarks as the move on houseboat or whatever they have devised prior to a full flooding of the lowlands. Being afloat, they can move from community to community, if compatibility is

not established, until they arrive at a site where they are welcome and the land is clearly going to remain above ground. The waters can be expected to rise for 2 years after the shift, but during this time, a floating group can fish or harvest from the sea.

Russia has vast borders and cannot defend them all, nor does it plan to do so. In such cases, limited border control is instituted in those places where the influx is the greatest or the migrants are the least desirable.

Russia has been primarily concerned about its borders with satellite countries that are in rebellion against Russian control, such as the Chechnya rebels. What will the vast country of Russia do when faced with the pole shift or the immense flooding of its territories anticipated to occur in the Aftertime? Certainly they will not try to keep migrants from coming into the country as their problem will be the reverse - hoards of

people trying to flee the rising waters. As we have mentioned, the Russian government plans to bunker in the Urals, which will be high ground and is well within Russian territory. We have advised would-be

survivors to avoid this area. The Urals will be aggressively defended, and any citizens nearby will be

conscripted into a slave labor force.

We have described the plate tongue that holds Kamchatka and the part of the North Islands of Japan as

being firmly part of the N American Plate, though this is often described as an independent platelet. It will remain so, throughout the Earth changes prior to the pole shift and the pole shift itself, though the

Kamchatka peninsula suffers from the subduction of the north Pacific Plate, with many erupting volcanoes.

The Eurasian and N American plates are locked against each other, neither allowing the other to roll as the edge is a virtual straight line from Japan to Iceland in the Atlantic.

What will happen to this plate border, cutting just to the west of the Verkhoyansk mountains and just to the south of the Kolyma mountains. Attempting to survive the pole shift along a river or in river bottom lands is never advised, as the pole shift sloshing can bore up a river and the torrential rains expected during the hour of the shift will make them flood beyond all memory in any case. Thus, we would advise the populace to clamor into the mountains, away from the rivers, thus avoiding any plate border grinding that might

occur. Those who take refuge in the mountains to the east of the plate border will find themselves ideally situated in the Aftertime, with an excellent climate and access to ocean fishing.

The Altay Mountains are four-corners border of Mongolia, China, Kazakstan, and Russia. The climate will

be temperate, much what it enjoys today. As with Mongolia Volcanic ash will not sweep the area, which

will enjoy clean air. Mountain building will not occur, nor has it for many eons, as this mountain range is far enough from the Himalayas and is participating somewhat in the stretch that the Eurasian Plate will

sustain. Thus, the deep lakes of eastern Russia and Kazakstan.

The Altai mountains stand where four countries touch - Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia and China. This is

high land and can lead a survivor in many positive directions. One direction, within Russian territory, is along the Russian mountains, past Lake Baikal, and onto the new Equator at the Bearing Straits. Another

direction would be down into Mongolia which likewise will do well, with a temperate climate and a desert that will bloom in the Aftertime. The highlands of China and Kazakhstan are likewise possible directions, and as they will remain temperate highlands and are agricultural today, so will not disappoint.

Is the Russian government planning an alternative site in the Altai Mountains? They have put their all into the Urals, as they clearly have withstood cataclysmic changes in the past and are solidly within Russian borders. The Altai are, relatively speaking, exposed. This leaves the mountains of Russia, leading to the new Equator, to survivors among the common man. These mountains are relatively cold and barren at

present, not populous today, thus there would be less crowding after the pole shift. This whole swatch, high land all of it, will be within temperate or tropical climates in the Aftertime. The Russian government would be advised to tell their people to take this trek, should they be inclined toward honesty and disclosure about the coming passage.

Lake Baikal and the Baikal rift zone to the east of the lake are in a region in the great Eurasian Plate that tore open in the past. This will not be the tear point this time around. We have stated that a new seaway will tear open in the Eurasian Plate, up along the border between Pakistan and Iran then on up toward the Urals.

The mountains of eastern Russia, above Mongolia, will not experience tearing or mountain building. Lake

Baikal and the rift region has some hot springs and mud volcanoes, but this will be the extent of volcanic activity, even during the pole shift. In that the climate there will be temperate in the Aftertime, this should be considered a safe location.

As we have stated, during the week of rotation stoppage, the normal process whereby the waters on the

surface of the Earth are pulled outward due to centrifugal force during rotation will halt. There is more water at the equator, during rotation, than at the poles, though man guesses at the differential and is not certain. Man's math will not even account for why the heavy Moon can remain aloft, using the centrifugal force equations, so man certainly does not have a handle on how to compute these matters. The drift of

these waters toward the poles during the week of rotation stoppage will be spread out along all latitudes between the Equator and the poles, and thus will not simply move as a mass to the poles to swamp any land mass there. Water moves slowly when there is a slight pressure difference, and rapidly when the difference in pressure is great. Here, at every step, the pressure difference from one portion of the ocean to another is slight. Thus our estimate of the increased sea level at Antarctica or the lands fringing the Arctic such as Siberia or northern Canada, is approximately 20 feet! This, despite the fact that some tropical beaches will appear greatly enlarged. It is the depth of the sea level lost or gained that matters, not the overall land mass covered or revealed.

There is another point of confusion regarding the shape of the Earth, which is an oval, fat around the

Equator and not a ball. This is not caused by deeper oceans, more water, at the Equator but rather the shape of the Earth itself, the magma layer in particular. This is a fact well known to your scientists. The magma accumulates around the Equator, due to the centrifugal force of rotation. The oceans would pool around the Equator also, were it not that the poles are essentially downhill from the Equator, gravitywise, being lower and closer to the core of the Earth. Thus, the pulling of water to the Equator is offset by the oceans flowing downhill, and the water is of a consistent depth around the world. In a crustal shift, the bulging part of the globe, the fat middle part, shifts too, developing around the new Equator. Thus our warning about being

675 feet above today's sea level applies, as ocean depth will be consistent after the pole shift.

Northern Russia, including the Kola Peninsula, are not lands subject to tidal bore. They are flat, without the rapid rise into high lands that encourage tidal bore. They likewise are not going to receive a funneled tidal wave such as Texas will receive, coming from the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf of Mexico tide will be pushed

aside by the Appalachia Mountains, and in addition will be water under pressure because the S American

Plate will be pushing over the Caribbean Plate, thus compressing the Gulf and thus increasing the height of the tide rushing against Texas. The Arctic has none of that. The great N American Plate and the great Eurasian Plate are locked at the Arctic, neither overriding the other. However, because water has pooled at the Arctic during rotation stoppage, to an additional dept of 20 feet, and because the lands of northern Russia and the Kola Penninsula are flat in the main, additional precautions should be taken. Thus the slosh is likely to be at the 520 foot level, so doubling the 100-mile-inland-and-200-foot-up rule would be

advised. Those along the coastlines will in any case have to move shortly, as the lowlands of northern

Russia will flood to the 675 foot level. Head to the highlands, without delay.

Yamantau mountain in the Urals is as well known. The Ural Mountains are the sanctuary to which the elite of Russia will rush, when the time comes. Just as the US elite have dug bunkers in the mountains of

Colorado and New Mexico, well stocked and hidden from the populace that financed with taxpayer dollars

what the elite presume to be a safe spot for survival, in like manner the elite of Russia have prepared in the Urals. As these beautiful mountains will become an island, surrounded by the rising waters which will

engulf the lowlands of Russia within two years after the shift, anyone other than the elite seeking sanctuary there will find themselves with demanding and arrogant neighbors. Fishing in the waters that will lap the shores of this Ural island will be good, but it will take some decades for the arrogant elite to die off or kill themselves off in pecking order battles, and thus any survivors of good heart in the area are advised to avoid the elite, and stay well hidden. In the case of the Urals, which are a continuous mountain range that will not experience volcanic upheaval or mountain building, the Russian military could traverse the entire length, and will do so. Why would they not? There will be a vast flood in all directions, so there will be no external threat or challenge to the Russian military. We have referred to the Urals as an island in the

Aftertime. Put an armed bully on an island with starving desperate people and the bully is only encouraged to be more brutal.

Uralsk, also known as Oral, is above the Caspian Sea in western Kazakhstan. This area will flood in the

Aftertime, when the sea level rises 675 feet. Consider the population of western Russia, who will in the main survive the pole shift as their land is not immediately flooded. Picking themselves up after the

devastation that collapses their cities and blows the landscape about in unaccustomed hurricane force

winds, the survivors will at first feel the worst is behind them, especially since the climate has become more moderate. Then the slow but steady encroachment of water, at first up the rivers and then spreading to all lands with a lower elevation. Those who thought they were on high ground, well drained and well away from any river flooding, will find the river waters coming to them, and still rising. Migration is inevitable -

large numbers of people on foot or by whatever means, trying to move to higher ground. When this high

ground starts melting underneath them, then boats will be constructed out of whatever material floats.

Northern and western Russia is a huge area, well populated today, and almost all of these people will be migrating in the Aftertime. Some will migrate west toward what they know is high ground, to Sweden.

Some will migrate south to another region they know is high ground, to the Alps, but where further east

within Russia they will consider the Ural Mountains or the high ground of Kazakhstan to be their salvation.

The crowding in those migratory routes will be intense. Those with wet boots, and exhausted, finding a

spot to rest for a moment will be overrun by those coming just behind them. And no foot anywhere. Most

of drowning central Russia will attempt to go to the Ural Mountains, which is Russian territory and closest at hand. When the fighting over a spot of dry land becomes too intense, many who have arrived on boats or have managed to fashion them will move south, along the Ural Mountains, toward what they know are

other swatches of dry land within Russian territory.

Thus, they will arrive at Uralsk, where they can go no further. The Ural high lands have run out, and water everywhere before them. This is where they must bridge over to the known high ground of eastern

Kazakhstan, which will visibly be above the waves in their view to the east. We have advised that the

people of Kazakhstan prepare to feed themselves heavily by fishing in the rising waters, as fish will be propagating, feeding on the dead and the decaying vegetation. Those who have drifted south to Uralsk will have learned to do this, but the crowding in Uralsk as the jumping off place for a boat trip to lands east will be intense, and anxieties high. Moving a make-shift boat along the edge of land is one thing, but crossing an expanse of open water another. Many will linger, and tension will be high among the starving.

The people of Uralsk were being warned of this, with the recent very visible UFO in clear blue skies. Once on dry land, survivors who have made the journey will not be wanting to wander further, but will be

wanting to settle and rest, to recover from their journey. Thus all of Kazakhstan will be heavily populated by newcomers, without exception. As with our advice for all cities, those living in cities such as Almaty will find they have to move out into the country to sustain themselves, and the further north, the more

moderate the climate.

Russia suffers greatly due to the flooding that will occur after the pole shift. Most of the country lies beneath the 675 foot elevation where we estimate the waters will rise. The Ural Mountains clearly stand

above this, as do the mountains of eastern Russia. But vast, heavily populated areas of Russia will become steadily flooded after the pole shift, to the dismay of survivors who perhaps have assumed they survived the worst. Cities like Ufa, Perm and Ekaterinburg essentially border the Urals, such that they will be

partically flooded but so soggy that life cannot continue as before. The inhabitants will of course scamper to the Urals, to join a massive number of refugees forced their earlier. The mountains of eastern Russia are sparsely populated, in Russian territory, and will have a delightful climate in the Aftertime. We advise an early migration to those regions, or a migration via boat if delayed.

Baku: Baku will ride out the pole shift in relative safety, as it is not directly downwind from any volcanoes, is not on major fault lines, is not likely to be inundated even from the sloshing of the Caspean Sea, and will continue to have a temperate climate. The major problem will be the type of housing the populace uses, as this is earthen based and collapses almost instantly when quakes hit, as recent history in Turkey attests.

During the week of rotation stoppage, all who hope to survive should not be in the cities, but in the

countryside, outdoors. Anticipate migrations from a flooding Russia, seeking higher ground. In that Baku will be close enough to the new coastline, the oceans covering the lowlands of Russia almost to the borders of Baku, it may find its experience with fishing the Caspean Sea an advantate. Simply sent those boats

further, and come home with a larger harvest!

ZetaTalk ™

Barnaul: Snugly within the mountains bordering the great steppes of Siberia, Barnaul will be in an area

inundated with half drown survivors after the shift. They will come up river, if they survive the tidal

flooding that will occur within two years after the shift, as they have survived by being on a boat, of sorts, and will press upriver seeking, in their fatigue, a place where the waters might stop rising at long last.

Barnaul is close to the headwaters where they will rest, and settle. Unaccustomed to any but local folks, the residents of Barnaul will find they have Russians they hardly recognize as neighbors, but keeping a good heart in hard times will make life merrier and far more interesting as the new neighbors will bring news, skills, and will invariably be hardy and resourceful folk, the type how make good teammates. During the

shift itself, Barnaul should guard against a rushing river rising over its banks, and jolts that will bring structures not designed for earthquakes down upon them. The Aftertime will find their climate no worse

off, in that they will be in a warmer climate, and close enough to fishing in the new oceans brought to their door to feed their new neighbors.

ZetaTalk ™

Chelyabinsk / Novgorod / Nizhni / Volgograd / Murmansk: These cities lie along rivers. Rivers, as we have often stated, are there the plate is thin, thus sagging, and thus low points where the water finds its level. The Eurasian Plate is pulling apart, except along the Pacific, where the great Eurasian Plate is encountering the compressing Pacific. Thus a new seaway will appear running up through the Indus Valley in Pakistan and

thence into Russia. The river bottoms in western Russia are pulling apart, and where the stretch zone is normally silent, earthquakes are certainly part of the process.

The Russian cities of Chelyabinsk, Volgograd, and Murmansk are along river beds, also in the stretch zone as we recently explained. All eyes have been on the emerging 7 of 10 scenarios lately, which are all

situated along the Equator, but changes are occurring elsewhere too. The changes in the central Pacific, where the four plates that compose the Pacific Plate are sliding over one another under the deep Pacific Ocean, affect more than Indonesia and the Philippine and Mariana Islands. This shortened Pacific tugs

China toward the Pacific, stretching the Eurasian Plate in many places all the way to Europe. Plate

movements, however slight, have repercussions elsewhere.

ZetaTalk ™

Irkusk: In the mountains north of Mongolia, on Lake Baikal, Irkusk will be a survivor of the shift from many standpoints. They will retain their temperate latitude, so the native and commercial plants life will be instantly aclimated. They are far from volcanic activity, although the prevailing westerlies will bring some ash to their land. They will have access to inland fresh water fishing, and due to the high carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere after the shift and for some time from volcanic burping, algae and water plants will grow lush. They are isolated from heavily populated areas, so that survivors reaching their area after the shift are hardy, not demanding, and will be contributors to the community. The largest worry during the shift will be from potential lake sloshing, in that jolting quakes as well as tipping plates can create this situation. Survivors are advised to move away from shore to high ground, and out of any buildings that can collapse during the shift or the aftershocks that will certainly occur.

ZetaTalk ™

Moscow: The heart of Russia, Moscow, will not fare well during the coming Earth changes. A city of old

structures, massive stone and old brick, it will be subject to easy destruction during any earthquake beyond the trivial that strikes during the shift, and strike they will. The broken link effect will apply block by block, as old plumbing will burst, old walls collapse, and old wires will snap. Every resident of Moscow can

expect to be isolated, no ability to communicate, no assurance that one will be rescued from a collapsed wall or building, and certainly no hope the infrastructure will be repaired, ever. Thus on foot and confused, undirected, these residents of a city long the heart of a directive government, will find they have a greater problem. At the headlands of rivers, Moscow will itself find water rising to its doors. At first, this news will come to them by the desperate homeless, arriving at the headlands with reports that the waters are rising in the rivers, coming inland from the all directions. Ultimately, the waters will swallow Moscow, drowning

any who have remained there. Survival requires moving to the Urals, to Finland, or to the south to

mountains well above the 650 foot above sea level required to stay above the rise of the oceans when the existing poles have melted. An ignominious end to the great land of the former Russia! There is scarcely any difference between 675 feet above sea level and 720 feet, especially when all around you will be

scampering for that same spot. Be prepared to build boats, and use them!

Many parts of the world have aquifers, some quite massive. Australia's great aquifer covers the eastern half of the country, for instance. In some cases, draining of these aquifers is associated with sinkholes because the support the water provided, within caverns, is now missing. Are these lands floating on a waterbed, so that the land could drop if the aquifer were ruptured? Yes and no. Obviously, where that land is going to end up under water, there is no such worry, as sea water would replace any fresh water lost. Where the

aquifer is well bounded by rock so that the water cannot escape unless the rupture creates a pathway, any loss of water is unlikely. If the bounding rock were such that it were easily ruptured, the aquifer would not have lasted for ages. In the case of Moscow, which is in the stretch zone, any rupture of the aquifer will occur during the hour of the pole shift, when the rivers will all be topping their banks, the area flooded in the extreme. There will be no drop in elevation for Moscow, so that, for instance, buildings sink slowly and disappear. The aquifer will replenish from the flood waters, and then Moscow will be inundated by the sea as the sea level rises.

Novosibirsk: Standing on the edge of the great marshlands of Siberian, Novosibirsk will be the scene of

drama during the hour of the shift and the months following. Far enough inland to avoid the sloshing water of the north seas, and placed in the center of an earthquake plate, this city on a river will find itself dealing with nothing more than flooding from upriver and the jolting that will bring all structures that cannot

withstand Richter 9 quakes down into rubble. The real drama will begin in the weeks and months following the shift, as Siberia will be inundated by rising water, steadily, over the two years following the shift, until these water cover even Novosibirsk in all but high ground. The flooded populace will have no recourse but to travel toward high ground, dragging carts or on foot, and in many cases afloat in make-shift boats, in particular traveling the river which will bring them to Novosibirsk. Thus, Novosibirsk will be in the heavy traffic lane, and should prepare to be asked by the desperate and confused to explain what has happened, where they should go, and what is to be done. In that the remains of Novosibirsk will be ocean frontage, with much warmer weather, in the Aftertime, there are bright spots on the horizon. Ocean fishing, where

the lush regrowth in the oceans can be shared by all due to ocean currents, will be good, and the deserts of Mongolia no longer a desert. Plan accordingly.

ZetaTalk ™

Omsk: As an example of how Siberia will be inundated steadily, leading into and after the shift, is the city of Omsk. Nestled in the lowlands along a river draining inland mountains, and surrounded by swamps

already inundated by the sea to the extent that they are somewhat salty, Omsk will be beset by water

problems from the start. Torrential rains that will descend on all parts of the globe, erratically, will cause the river to flood, and where will the water go? The swamps will absorb a great deal of water, and be slow to release it to the sea hundreds of miles away. Already afloat, Omsk will then find during the week of

rotation that water that has drained away from the equator and toward the poles is creating a backwash.

Even less drainage, and more standing water in the swamps. Now comes the shift, and where Omsk is

protected from ocean sloshing, it will soon find itself with water rising all around, without a chimney

standing above the rising water. Those who would survive are advised to move inland to the mountains, or secure a good boat is take them there, as they will be afloat in any case unless they move well prior to the week of rotation stoppage.

ZetaTalk ™

Saint Petersburg: On the waters edge, St. Petersburg, Russia, will find itself subject to a series of disasters during the pole shift. First, there will be high tides during the shift, as though they are at the end of a long bay, this is where the water sloshing in will find itself seeking an outlet, and will run inland through the city and pool in low lying areas, unable to drain. When the shift has passed, St. Petersburg will find itself inundated by the rising seas, the residents running repeatedly toward the highlands of Finland and

Scandinavia, to escape the inundation. Residents of St. Petersburg hoping to survive should make plans,

ahead of time, to move to high ground, relocating days ahead of the shift so they are not in reaction mode, but pro-active. They carry with them the soul of Russia, the brains, the insights of the Russian people, not a thing to be lost during the coming changes, when courage and insight will be needed in the communities of survivors.

How high will the European tsunami be when it works its way up the Baltic Sea and thence through the

Gulf of Finland to St. Petersburg? St. Petersburg should not be complacent as it lies on lowland, and though the force of the tsunami will be greatly dissipated, the wash of water at St. Petersburg will be greater than any tides yet experienced. What does dissipation of a 100 foot tall wall of water mean? It means dropping, steadily, in height, to 50 foot, then 20 foot, then 10 foot, etc. Any city on the water can expect an impact.

The greater threat to beautiful St. Petersburg and the surrounding lowlands is the pole shift itself, which in any case cannot be avoided. Europe is being stretched, as the northern Atlantic widens and the African

Plate drops. There have been many stretch zone accidents through eastern Europe and the Black Sea, where areas around rivers give way. This will only increase as plate movements during the 7 of 10 progress, and will become an almost continuous worry thereafter. We have stated that all dams will break during the pole shift, if not well beforehand. Lake Ladoga, which lies just east of St. Petersburg on the Neva River will be inundated with the tide during the 7 of 10 European tsunami, carrying the impact of the tsunami well inland for this region.

ZetaTalk ™

Vladivostok: Protected from the assaults of Pacific tidal flooding by the islands of Japan, Vladivostok will nonetheless find itself awash. Survivors should scramble to the mountains of China or, if there is time, to the mountains north in Russian territory. Both will become islands within two years from the polar melt, so some forethought in this regard might be wise. The lands of China bordering North Korea will be awash with refugees from Korea, so ethnic tensions will be aplenty. Vladivpstok survivros will find themselves in familiar territory in that the Aftertime will present them with ocean fishing, and be pleasantly surprised to find the climate much warmer as they stretch out along the new Equator at a very temperate latitude.

Vladivostok is in a highly vulnerable position. It sits on a peninsula close to the ocean on both sides. Its elevation is so low that it will surely be swamped during the pole shift tidal waves, the peninsula run over completely with water roaring back and forth. The pulsing UFO display, formed into in a twisting point, was to focus the citizens of Vladivostok to consider their position on a pointed peninsula. The good citizens of Vladivostok were of course being warned to leave, if intending to survive the pole shift at all.

Kazakstan: Kazakstan will become immensely important to the Russian people after the shift, as it is high country, and well connected to parts both north and south by culture, commerce, and tradition. Drowning Russians from the north will arrive at what will be the new shorelines, when the lowlands of Siberia go under water. They will bring with them few possessions, but humility will not be among them. Kazakstan is not considered the home of the elite in Russia, but any elite not scrambling to the Urals will try to set up shop in Kazakstan. Where else where they go, to the Alps, or to Sweden? Thus, in preparation for this arrival, either just before or some months after the shift, residents of Kazakstan should mentally prepare their stance toward such a take-over attempt. Guests are welcome but are expected to work alongside their hosts, and no new leadership is desired.

Kazakstan today has both summer and winter, and is agricultural. After the shift, it will find itself closer to the new South Pole, and colder. This will change the culture into one of fishing in the ocean to what will become the new south, over former Siberian lands, where fish and all they feed upon will migrate to eat the rotting material that has gone under the waves. There will be other outlets to the oceans, as the continent will rip and create a rift above the Himalayas, but being centered in the new Polar Circle, this will freeze and not allow ready access to ocean fishing. Inland lakes without an outlet may temporarily rise, due to the continuous drizzle that follows the shift, so residents along the shorelines of such lakes should anticipate moving up into the hills if need be. The jolts from the shift, which will drive the Himalayas higher, will shatter any housing not flexible, so that structures of brick or stone or mortar will fall upon the hapless residents huddled there. Best to weather the hour of the shift outdoors, in ravines, and remake housing afterwards.

Kazakstan will not be flooded during the pole shift nor have to deal with tidal waves, though the inundation from the sea which will overtake Siberia steadily within two years after the pole shift will affect a large segment of Kazakstan also. The ocean will come to Kazakstan, and thus preparations should include building boats for ocean fishing. The climate in the Aftertime will be closer to what northern Canada has today. Crops that do well with a short growing season, such as are grown in Mongolia and northern Canada, should be planned, with seed sock accumulated. Because Kazakstan will do so well, overall, and so much of Russia will be flooded, Kazakstan's largest problem will be sociological, due to an inundation of refugees! Some may arrive well ahead of the pole shift, and attempt to set themselves up as kings.

Kazakstan should prepare for this as well, with firm plans on how to deal with such takeover attempts.

Tashkent: As with all lands such as Pakistan bordering India, which will become the new South Pole, the climate of Tashkent will change dramatically after the shift as it will lie within the new Polar Circle. Lying on a river, it will also find itself scoured by raging water that crests higher than flood tides in memory. A third devastation will be the quakes, as Tashkent likes near the Himalayas that will be violently uplifted during the subduction of India, causing quakes that will leave no building standing. Thus, residents of the city are likely to be crushed, drowned, and then frozen, in that order. Survivors will be those who were outdoors, away from the river banks and well into the hills, and dressed for winter or with that clothing at hand. These will be rural, not city folk. If they have the good sense or luck to migrate toward Russia, things will warm up, but the first instinct of most will be to move toward what they recall were warm lands, toward the Equator, the wrong direction to go. Thus, it will be the exception, not the norm, for there to be survivors from the great city of Tashkent.

ZetaTalk ™

Mongolia: Mongolia will have a climate equivalent to southern Canada today, after the pole shift, which will be only a slight adjustment to what it experiences today. It will not be in the ash fall from the volcanoes in Kamchatka, as clean air coming off what was formerly the Arctic and what will be the flooded lands of Siberia will be their prevailing winds. Thus, though not heavily populated today, Mongolia should support survivors well. The populace of Mongolia is self sustaining, rural, and hardy.

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