NationStates Jolt Archive


Major Volcanic Activities detected in the Atlantic!

23-12-2003, 10:02
4:55 AM, Atlantic time.
Location: The Wreck of the titanic


Cpt Morgan: Alright men. Remember, dont touch ANYTHING!

Explorer 1: Aye aye sir.

Explorer 2: Roger

As the 3 explorers venture deeper into the titanic, a loud rumbling noise is heard and felt

Explorer 1: Whoa what was that!

Explorer 2: Holy Shit!

Cpt. Morgan: Nothing to be afraid of men, just a little bit of rumbling.

Explorer 1: Right...

At that moment, another loud rumbling noise is heard and felt

Explorer 2: Uh...Can we leave now?

Cpt Morgan: No, we are going deeper, follow me.

As the captian goes into the ship, it seems the entire ocean rumbles, and a hole in the sand appears, the titanic along with the captian are swallowed up

Explorer 1: HOLY SHIT IM GETTING OUT OF HERE!!! AHHH!!

Explorer 2: WRONG WAY, STOP!

Explorer 1: I DONT CARE, IM GETTING THE FU-

Before the explorer finishes his sentence, a giant burst of liquid magma explodes from where the titanic sat, scorching the settler underwater immediatly, and badly burning the 2nd one

Explorer 2: Must....get....to.....shore.....ugh...

Last thing the explorer sees is a large mountian rising out of the water upwards. Back on the mainland, scientists predict a large volcanic eruption in the middle of nowhere in the atlantic ocean, they predict that the hardened magma will form an island as large as Iceland. They also predict that a cloud of smoke will engulf almost all the atlantic, parts of europe, asia, and north america. Gas masks are on high demand.
Kanuckistan
23-12-2003, 10:43
Excusing the fact that that location is in the middle of a continental plate, underwater volcanoes take hundreds, if not thousands of years just to break the ocean surface; something that size would probally take tens of thousands of years to form. What you're sugesting would release a few orders of magnitude more crap into the air than would be needed to cause a global 'nuclear-'esque winter for decades, atleast.