Dilip Deka Pl.note contents- and comment on WateraWatch/assamnet.
mm

To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: 
Fri, 11 Apr 2008 10:29:53 +0300Subject: RE: [WaterWatch] History of Dam Failures




Dear All,What regards Scandinavia, a Precambrian shield and considered to be 
very stable it has indeed experienced neo-trectonics after the last ice-age in 
terms of new faults for instance. This has come forward during the 
investigations for a safe storage of radioactive wastes. There is of course a 
difference in regard to the glaciers in the Himalayas and a dam. The inland ice 
was more than 1 km thick meaning that there uis a difference in load.Best 
regards!Gunnar JacksKTHSE-100 44 StockholmSwedenCiterar uday chaturvedi <[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]>:> Dear Friends,The attached note based on the research done by one 
> German Scientist is alarming. Any comments/corrections?>> After the last ice 
age (9000 years ago), Scandinavia experienced, as > per reports, a surge in 
tectonic activity. Increased seismicity has > already been observed in Alaska. 
Madam Andrea Hampel, Ruhr > University, Bochum, Germany says that Ice caps 
clamp down on quakes > - a freeze on Earth quakes.>> Our GOI seems just not 
bothered about what is in store for States in > the Gangetic and Brahmaputra 
basins. Melting of glaciers/ thick ice > sheets means not only increased 
frequency and intensity of floods > and severe erosion of Himalayan formations 
and hence sedimentation > in the down stream river basins, but also increased 
seismicity. > There are many geological faults beneath the heavy glaciers/ ice 
> sheets. When once the top load i.e; the thick layer of ice, gets > melted, 
the pressure built-up in the fault zones may get released > through Earth 
quakes. This is not Geo-poetry! What will happen to > the down stream 
reservoirs - their safety and life periods? Even > otherwise the Himalayan 
region is seismically very active. Severity > and frequency of Earth quakes may 
increase. The climate > change-factors were not considered in the design of the 
dams ( > enhanced sedimentation rates, increased and erratic flows, etc.) and > 
in the dam break analysis.> One hopes that Madam Andrea Hampel's analysis is 
scientifically > incorrect in the Himalayan context.> With kind regards,> Udaya 
Shanakr>>> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > Wed, 26 Mar 2008 
07:44:50 +0000Subject: Re: RE: [WaterWatch] History > of Dam 
Failures>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> 
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