Ya, it was a big one. Looks like a container had something that ignited and set off a shock wave explosion killing 44 and injuring hundreds.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHQPX2TJPQc
Another after vid showing devastation.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rheGSNix6vk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hvo8yzRBU4Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hvo8yzRBU4Q
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZ9GH23CR8o
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZ9GH23CR8o
Suit case nuck in a container. What ya think. That looked to be a powerful and loud detonation. That glow looked just a nuck blast with that mushroom cloud not to mention all that destruction for miles around.
Quote from: Gigas on August 14, 2015, 04:59:10 PM
That looked to be a powerful and loud detonation.
From what I have seen they were at least two explosions, the second being the bigger.
QuoteThat glow looked just a nuck blast with that mushroom cloud not to mention all that destruction for miles around.
All big explosions make a mushroom cloud.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/tianjin-blast-zone-evacuated_55cf398ee4b0ab468d9d79a1?kvcommref=mostpopular
AP
Posted: 08/15/2015 09:21 AM EDT | Edited: 2 hours ago
Tianjin Blast Zone Evacuated Over Contamination Fears
The chemical explosion left over 100 people dead.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cf3b8b1700006e00567996.jpeg)
A cloud of smoke rises at blast site three days after warehouse explosion on Aug. 15, 2015 in Tianjin, China | Credit: ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images
TIANJIN, China (AP) -- New small explosions rocked a disaster zone in the Chinese port of Tianjin on Saturday as teams scrambled to clear dangerous chemical contamination and found several more bodies to bring the death toll to 104 in massive blasts earlier in the week.
Angry relatives of missing firefighters stormed a government news conference to demand any information on their loved ones, who have not been seen since a fire and rapid succession of blasts late Wednesday at a warehouse for hazardous chemicals in a mostly industrial area.
The death toll in the ensuing inferno included at least 21 firefighters - making the disaster the deadliest for Chinese firefighters in more than six decades.
An unknown number of firefighters remain missing, and a total of 720 people were injured in the disaster in Tianjin, 120 kilometers (75 miles) east of Beijing. One additional survivor was found Saturday.
Two Chinese news outlets, including the state-run The Paper, reported that the warehouse was storing 700 tons of sodium cyanide - 70 times more than it should have been holding at one time - and that authorities were rushing to clean it up.
Sodium cyanide is a toxic chemical that can form a flammable gas upon contact with water.
Authorities also detected the highly toxic hydrogen cyanide in the air at levels slightly above safety levels at two locations in the afternoon, The Paper cited Tianjin environmental official Wen Wurui as saying. But the contamination was no longer detected later Saturday and there was no obvious impact on anybody in the area, the report said.
The disaster has raised questions about whether dangerous chemicals were being stored too close to residential compounds, and whether firefighters may have triggered the blasts, possibly because they were unaware the warehouse contained chemicals combustible on contact with water. The massive explosions Wednesday happened about 40 minutes after reports of a fire at the warehouse and after an initial wave of firefighters arrived and, reportedly, doused some of the area with water.
Authorities on Saturday pulled out one survivor from a shipping container, state media reported. His identity was not immediately known. Television video showed the man being carried out on a sketcher by a group of soldiers wearing gas masks.
Authorities were keeping residents, journalists and other people not involved in the disaster response outside a 3-kilometer (1.8-mile) radius around the site of the explosions in what media reports said was an operation to clean up the sodium cyanide.
Flames were spotted in the disaster area on Saturday, and explosions were reported by witnesses and state media.
In one case, heavy smoke from a fire engulfing several cars rose as high as 10 meters (yards), accompanied by at least five explosions.
Police and military personnel manned checkpoints on roads leading to the blast sites, and helicopters were seen hovering in the overcast sky. The air had a metallic chemical smell, and there was uneasiness over rain forecasts, although it was warm and windy.
aol vid at linkMeanwhile, family members of missing firefighters disrupted the latest news conference about the disaster, demanding to know whether their loved ones were still alive.
"(The authorities) didn't notify us at all," said Liu Huan, whose son Liu Chuntao has been missing since late Wednesday. "Our son is a firefighter, and there was a team of firefighters who lost contact. We couldn't contact him."
Liu Longwang said she had not heard a word on her son Liu Ziqiao, also a firefighter. "We are extremely worried," she said. "He just turned 18."
State media reported that the casualties of the first three squads of firefighters to respond and of a neighborhood police station have not yet been fully determined, suggesting that the death toll could rise further.
Tianjin Fire Department head Zhou Tian said at a news conference Friday that the explosions occurred just as reinforcements had arrived on the scene and were getting to work. "There was no chance to escape, and that's why the casualties were so severe," he said. "We're now doing all we can to rescue the missing."
One surviving firefighter, 19-year-old Zhou Ti, was found Friday morning and taken to a hospital. Zhou Ti and Zhou Tian are unrelated.
Li Yonghan, a doctor at Teda Hospital, called Zhou's survival "miraculous" and said Zhou escaped death mainly because he was covered by his fallen comrades. Zhou had massive injuries, including burns and leg cuts.
From his hospital bed, Zhou told state broadcaster CCTV that the fire was spreading out of control. "I was knocked onto the ground at the first blast," recalled Zhou, his eyes swollen and closed. "I covered my head and don't know what happened after that."
Lin Yujie, who lives in a nearby residential complex, said when he initially heard the blasts Wednesday night he thought they were a massive air strike.
"It was just a sea of fire," Lin recalled. "We were really worried that there would be a second or third explosion and what we would do then."
As details of the blasts and the rescue efforts surface, members of the public have been raising questions about whether fire commanders had erred in prematurely sending firefighters into a highly dangerous zone and using water to put out flames on the site known to have stored a variety of hazardous chemicals, including sodium cyanide and calcium carbide, which become flammable on contact with water.
Local officials also have been hard-pressed to explain why authorities permitted hazardous goods warehouses so close to residential complexes and critical infrastructure, clearly in violation of the Chinese rule that hazmat storage should be 1,000 meters (yards) away from homes and public structures.
Pope Francis, meanwhile, offered his prayers to the victims of the disaster. "I assure my prayers for those who lost their lives and for all those persons tried by this disaster," he said Saturday in remarks to thousands of people gathered in St. Peter's Square.
Francis made the remarks despite a tense relationship between Beijing and the Vatican.
this doesn't look like it is improving anyhttp://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/amid-new-explosions-and-fires-at-site-of-chinese-blasts-there-is-confusion-over-evacuation-order/ar-BBlMgLP
Los Angeles Times
Julie Makinen
3 hrs ago
Amid new explosions and fires at site of Chinese blasts, there is confusion over evacuation order
(http://img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/BBlM9Ba.img?h=486&w=728&m=6&q=60&o=f&l=f)
© Ng Han Guan Chinese emergency crew survey the site of an explosion in northeastern China's Tianjin municipality Saturday, Aug. 15, 2015. New explosions and fire rocked the Chinese port city of Tianjin on Saturday, where one survivor was...
REPORTING FROM BEIJING - A new round of explosions and fires hit the Chinese port city of Tianjin on Saturday, pouring at least three plumes of black smoke into the sky, as confusion reigned over whether authorities had ordered the evacuation of a two-mile zone around the hazardous chemicals warehouse that exploded earlier in the week.
A 56-year-old man was rescued from a container just 150 feet from the blast site around 2 p.m. Saturday by hazmat teams, state-run China Central Television reported. Photos from the scene showed troops in camouflage protective gear and gas masks carrying the shirtless man to safety on a stretcher. He was later reported to be in stable condition.
Firefighters and hazmat teams have struggled to bring the situation in the Binhai New Area under control for days, and criticism is mounting over multiple aspects of the disaster. The death toll has risen to 104 people, with more than 700 injured. At least 21 firefighters have died. According to the People's Daily, the identity of only 28 of the 104 victims could be immediately confirmed; DNA tests would be performed on the rest.
In yet another sign of confusion, the state-run Xinhua News Agency and other official media outlets reported at around 2 p.m. that authorities had ordered the evacuation of a two-mile zone around the blast site. But at a news conference three hours later, a Tianjin official denied there was any evacuation order, a denial that was later reported by People's Daily and other official outlets. Yet journalists on the scene quoted locals as saying they had been told to evacuate.
A variety of toxic substances were believed to be stored at the site including potassium nitrate, ammonium nitrate, sodium cyanide and calcium carbide. Sodium cyanide has leaked into water seeping from the area, officials say, though measures were taken to block storm drains and other effluent routes.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, sodium cyanide can release hydrogen cyanide gas, a highly toxic chemical asphyxiant that interferes with the body's ability to use oxygen.
Exposure to sodium cyanide can be quickly fatal, the CDC says; hydrogen cyanide gas released by sodium cyanide has a distinctive odor described by some people as bitter almond or a musty "old sneakers smell," but many people cannot detect it and the odor does not provide adequate warning of hazardous concentrations.
The operator of a chemical plant in Hebei province has come forward to say that his firm had delivered 700 tons of sodium cyanide to the warehouse where the blasts occurred, even though the warehouse was permitted to store only up to 10 tons of the hazardous material, the Science Daily and other news outlets reported. Authorities were amassing tons of hydrogen peroxide to neutralize the sodium cyanide.
Conflicting reports about evacuations and the appearance of hazmat squads on the scene added to fears about the health hazards for local residents. State-run television has shown footage of hazmat teams in gas masks and protective suits tromping through the disaster area, trying to determine what toxic substances were present, though these specialists apparently did not arrive on the scene until about 36 hours after the initial blasts late Wednesday night.
Meanwhile, family members of some emergency workers confronted Tianjin officials Saturday morning at a press conference. Some claimed that their relatives were contract employees - not full-fledged firefighters - and have not been accounted for in the official death and injury tolls. Authorities denied that that was the case.
"I don't know where my son is. I've no clues. If he is alive, I want to see him. If he is dead, I need to see his body," Liu Huan told the state-run newspaper China Daily. Liu's 22-year-old son, Liu Chuntao, was among the first group of firefighters sent to the scene.
Authorities had said the main fire was extinguished by 6 p.m. Friday night, according to Xinhua. So it was unclear why or how new explosions and fires were set off Saturday.
Video footage carried by state-run media showed at least one of the fires appeared to be several cars burning in a parking lot just south of the blast site. The vehicles were new cars awaiting shipment to dealerships around China and had already been damaged in the initial blasts.
Local fire officials said they had mobilized 66 forklifts, as well as cranes, excavators and armed police trucks to deal with the situation at the site, and had transported 600 tons of sand to the area that could be used to extinguish hot spots.
Authorities have called the complexity and scale of the accident unprecedented and say it's the deadliest incident for firefighters since the founding of Communist China in 1949.
Neither President Xi Jinping nor Premiere Li Keqiang - who is often dispatched to the site of major disasters - has visited Tianjin yet. Xi on Saturday ordered officials to learn from the "extremely profound" lessons, which have been "paid for with blood."
China, he said, needs greater accountability, better emergency response mechanisms, better implementation of work safety regulations, and careful checks of all possible safety risks.
The full economic toll of the incident has yet to be calculated, but Binhai district vice chief said Friday that 17,000 households and 1,700 businesses had been affected. Binhai accounts for 55% of Tianjin's gross domestic product and posted growth of 15.5% last year, Xinhua reported - twice China's overall growth rate.
Who would bear responsibility for paying for all the damage to business and residential properties remained unclear. China's insurance regulator ordered insurers to prioritize claims from the incident.
Automobiles, information technology, aviation services, petroleum and chemical engineering are among the key sectors represented in Binhai. The centrally planned business, residential and industrial area rose from a swath of fields and small villages in recent years.
Automakers have reported significant disruptions to their activities in Tianjin. The port processes about 40% of China's imported cars, Xinhua said.
Thousands of new cars awaiting shipment to dealerships were burnt to a crisp by Wednesday's massive explosion.
Toyota said 50 members of its staff in the area were injured. Renault alone said it lost about 1,500 vehicles with a value of more than $30 million.
Sun Jiuwen, a professor of regional economy at Renmin University of China, said the immediate effect on Tianjin's economy could be grave in the short term.
"Even if we put aside the direct losses, including casualties, cargoes and infrastructure damage, the tragedy will severely strike the local economy, which heavily relies on the chemical, port and logistics industries," he told China Daily.
published at 12:37 a.m.
Beginning to look like a space weapon attack.
Rods from god.
This explosion occurred a day after the Chinese devalued the yuan.
First detonation was 3 tonnes of tnt. The second detonation was a 20 ton hit.
Chinese bloggers report black helicopters in the air the day before.
"After looking through the images of the soviet nuclear tests, the new lake in China appears to have been made by a slightly sub surface burst of at least a 5 kiloton nuclear bomb... This was NOT an accident and the fracture pattern around the crater proves a sub ground burst. If it was a sub ground burst, then a small nuclear weapon is the biggest possibility because once a nuke has to push dirt, the blinding flash will not happen. A slightly subsurface detonation would explain why camera sensors did not get strange artifacts. And if it was not a nuke, it was something else incredibly huge, but not a fuel air bomb because fuel air bombs will not leave craters."
http://www.naturalnews.com/050816_Tianjin_explosion_space-based_weapons_military_retaliation.html# (http://www.naturalnews.com/050816_Tianjin_explosion_space-based_weapons_military_retaliation.html#)
Edit to ad: space otter got gold
Quote from: space otter on August 16, 2015, 04:01:09 AM
Amid new explosions and fires at site of Chinese blasts, there is confusion over evacuation order
Safety procedure at PEPCON in Henderson Las Vegas
ONE garden hose to put out fires
Instructions: In case of fire... RUN LIKE HELL
True story :D You cannot put out a fire of rocket fuel
Quote from: space otter on August 16, 2015, 04:01:09 AM
(http://img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/BBlM9Ba.img?h=486&w=728&m=6&q=60&o=f&l=f)
What I find strange in that photo is that those dark containers in the centre and on the left of the photo appear unaffected by the blast, so maybe the blast looks stronger because of the (apparently) weaker containers.
Quote from: Gigas on August 18, 2015, 04:31:26 AM
"And if it was not a nuke, it was something else incredibly huge, but not a fuel air bomb because fuel air bombs will not leave craters."
A fuel air bomb does not leave a crater? ???
Quote from: ArMaP on August 18, 2015, 10:32:27 AM
What I find strange in that photo is that those dark containers in the centre and on the left of the photo appear unaffected by the blast, so maybe the blast looks stronger because of the (apparently) weaker containers.
Another observation is the lack of scorch marks. not only on the blue containers but the other ones as well.
The blue containers are a mystery tho, they look like they where put there after the blast. Also note that they are smaller compared to the standard containers.
Odd.
Quote from: Gigas on August 18, 2015, 04:31:26 AM
This explosion occurred a day after the Chinese devalued the yuan.
I'm surprised noone made this connection yet, this was my first thought as well. And it does seem to hold some water because
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-08-11/not-drill-india-russia-and-thailand-prepare-currency-war
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/opinion/Chinas-currency-devaluation-Thailands-economic-nig-30266475.html
And now we had the bombing in Thailand, might be a coincidence, might be something else entirely.
My gut feeling tells me this has everything to do with the dominant role of the Dollar.
Quote from: ArMaP on August 18, 2015, 11:15:04 AM
A fuel air bomb does not leave a crater? ???
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dW1qkBg8sM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dW1qkBg8sM
could someone explain me what happened to these containers?
(http://i.imgur.com/mgbHyfn.jpg)
It looks like they had an explosion inside
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/toxic-chemicals-tianjin-china-explosion_55d1b43ce4b0ab468d9da7d5?utm_hp_ref=world&kvcommref=mostpopular
Matt Sheehan
China Correspondent, The WorldPost
Posted: 08/17/2015 08:51 AM EDT | Edited: 08/17/2015 03:02 PM EDT
Rain Threatens To Ignite Toxic Chemicals At Chinese Blast Site
Deadly fumes, protesting families and rumors of corruption in Tianjin.
vid at linkCleanup crews and local officials are scrambling to confront challenges ranging from chemical residue to protesting families five days after a chemical storage facility exploded in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin.
Fires continue to smolder at the site of the blast that has already taken 114 lives with 70 more people missing, and nearby residents have been evacuated in anticipation of changing winds and rainfall. Officials believe the warehouse that exploded was home to over 700 tons of sodium cyanide, a substance that can produce deadly toxins when it comes into contact with water.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55d1bb0414000077002e3069.jpeg)
Credit: Paul Traynor/Associated Press
Smoke rises from damaged container boxes near the site of an explosion at a warehouse in northeastern China's Tianjin municipality, Monday, Aug. 17, 2015.
At a press conference Monday, He Shushan, deputy mayor of Tianjin, told reporters that most of the sodium cyanide will be cleared from the site by Monday evening, while military officials guaranteed that there would be "no secondary damage to the people" outside of the evacuation zone. That proved little comfort for area residents who feared the worst.
"I asked my in-laws to take my daughter home. I don't want them to stay here," Tian Binyan, a migrant worker, told CNN. "I'm worried. I heard it's going to rain later and that would make the air toxic."
As cleanup crews hustle to clear the blast site, local officials face mounting frustration from two main groups: nearby homeowners demanding compensation for their property, and the families of firefighters desperate for information about their loved ones.
Both Sunday and Monday saw protests by residents -- some with their heads still wrapped in bandages -- demanding to know how a chemical facility was located so close to their homes and calling on the government to purchase their damaged homes outright.
X
Even more emotionally fraught have been the protests by families of firefighters. Many of the firefighters who responded to the blaze were contracted by the local port authority rather than the military. That could potentially put them "outside the system," meaning they would be excluded from the compensation and recognition granted to official military firefighters. The South China Morning Post reports that on Sunday, about 40 family members of firefighters marched to the local government offices demanding information and equal treatment for their family members.
Yuan Chenggang, father of a missing 18-year-old firefighter, vented his frustration.
We've been here for four days, but still haven't met anyone who can tell us anything useful," he told the Post while outside the local government headquarters.
X
On Monday, local and national authorities attempted to address these issues. In a press conference, authorities said 85 firefighters remained missing, 72 of whom had been contracted by the local port. In a rare impromptu interview in Tianjin, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told Hong Kong's i-Cable news that every firefighter's sacrifice would be equally recognized.
"For our heroes, no one is 'outside the system,'" Li said. "Regardless of whether they're firefighting officers or non-military firefighting workers, we will treat them the same."
Even as officials moved to calm anger over compensation to families and residents, Chinese media began reporting on the official ties of Ruihai Logistics, the owner of the chemical warehouse that exploded. On Sunday, the investigative media outlet Caijing quoted industry insiders who claimed that Ruihai's listed stockholders are merely a front for the real owners -- one of whom, sources claimed, is the son of the former head of the port's public security bureau.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55d1bc8b14000077002e306a.jpeg)
Those accusations have yet to be confirmed, but they are feeding speculation that preferential treatment or corruption may have helped lay the groundwork for the massive blaze. Chinese authorities have pledged a full-fledged investigation, citing President Xi Jinping's ongoing corruption crackdown as evidence that any malfeasance will be punished.
For now, however, most of the punishment has been directed at newspapers and social media accounts accused of "spreading rumors" about the blast. China's Internet regulator said it has suspended or revoked the licenses of 50 websites for claiming there's been looting at malls, or for reporting death tolls of more than 1,000 people. Chinese authorities have taken a hard line on "rumors" in recent years, attempting to confine reporters to using official channels. In the days following the explosion, an academic monitoring Chinese social media reported a tenfold increase in censorship.
lots of embedded links in article..........................
http://www.cnn.com/2015/08/17/asia/china-tianjin-industrial-accidents/
27 photos from explosion....must go to site to review
Remember that Texas fertilizer explosion 2013 by Waco Texas.
Lets have a look see.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ba8jTkRWiwI
Witness report seeing an incoming projectile before the big explosion.
That PEPCO explosion north of Las Vegas, was huge. I picked up empty containers there once and the place was fenced in with signs no smoking. I drove in and before they let me out off the truck, I had to put on rubber boots. They told me this stuff is highly explosive and was a component for rocket fuel.
That shipment went to some little plant in south Arkansas if I remember correctly.
Back to the China blast. Those burnt out cars ready to be shipped, are reminiscent of the 911 event where cars burnt up as well. Yet, 911 had no detonation. Then again, they found traces of material used in nukes at 911 that they tried to wash away before letting anyone in. I'm guessing the same thing at the china port since they have it on lock down.
Edit to ad: this vid is the after math of the new cars being incinerated. Notice at 2:13 how a vehicle melted to a molten mass and cooled into a puddle.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVWZ0NNh4Vw
Quote from: Senduko on August 18, 2015, 11:34:32 AM
Another observation is the lack of scorch marks. not only on the blue containers but the other ones as well.
The blue containers are a mystery tho, they look like they where put there after the blast. Also note that they are smaller compared to the standard containers.
Odd.
There are a few more like them in the back left, crunched a bit.The ones in the foreground look as though they actually flew through the air a long ways.
Maybe the pushed out ones were full of popcorn headed to Cosco :P
Guess what else is located at Tianjin.
The National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin is one of the main centers. It houses the Tianhe-I supercomputer which in October 2010 became the top speed record holder in the world by consistently operating at 2.507 petaflops. The Tianjin Computer Institute had been active as far back as 1984 when it developed the 16-bit TQ-0671 microcomputer system. A commercial affiliate of the Tianjin center had previously made the PHPC100 personal supercomputer in 2008 which was about twice the size of a normal desktop computer, but had 40 times the speed. In 2010 a second generation model was released.
Now they have this which the US stopped Intel from suppling the CPUs for
China now has the new improved "TIANHE-2 (MILKYWAY-2) - TH-IVB-FEP CLUSTER, INTEL XEON E5-2692 12C 2.200GHZ, TH EXPRESS-2, INTEL XEON PHI 31S1P" located at Guangzhou, China. Is that the next strategic target in the space/cyber wars
2,200ghz with 3,120,000 cores, when we only get maybe an 8 core 4.1ghz cpu for our home computers. We have to complain about that.
Then we had an embargo April 2015 on China not to sell Intel CPUs to them for that super computer.
"The US government has blocked Intel from shipping high-end Xeon processors to China's supercomputer builders – and other American chip giants are banned, too.
Intel confirmed to The Register last night it was refused permission to sell the chips to the Middle Kingdom's defense labs and other parts of its supercomputing industry.
"Intel was informed in August by the US Department of Commerce that an export license was required for the shipment of Xeon and Xeon Phi parts for use in specific previously disclosed supercomputer projects with Chinese customer INSPUR," a spokesperson for the Santa Clara-based biz said, adding:
Intel complied with the notification and applied for the license which was denied. We are in compliance with the US law.
Those Xeon chips are vital to high-performance computing needed for scientific research and similar work: they will be used to power the 50,000-node, 180-petaFLOPS Aurora supercomputer Intel and Cray are building for the US Department of Energy, due to go live in 2018. China's Tianhe-2 computer, today the world's fastest publicly known supercomputer, uses 3.1 million Intel Xeon E5 cores to hit 54 petaFLOPS in peak performance."
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/04/10/us_intel_china_ban/ (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/04/10/us_intel_china_ban/)
(http://s22.postimg.org/epm59tgo1/tianhe2_supercomputer.jpg)
(http://s10.postimg.org/4xp8070jt/Tianhe_2.jpg)
Now that you got that, get this,
Quote
The National Supercomputing Center of Tianjin
On August 12 2015, the center was forced to shut down for a time (it was still offline as of August 14) due to widespread infrastructural damage, along with related security concerns, incurred as a result of the 2015 Tianjin port disaster.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Supercomputing_Center_of_Tianjin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Supercomputing_Center_of_Tianjin)
Quote from: Gigas on August 14, 2015, 04:59:10 PM
Suit case nuke in a container. What ya think. That looked to be a powerful and loud detonation. That glow looked just a nuke blast with that mushroom cloud not to mention all that destruction for miles around.
Alright, somethings going on here. I modified several post from ME and the first one failed to post but posted the same original post again, minus the modification. The second post I just modified for a spelling error posted again as a new post. Some one explain that.
Now that the world is full on space wars and cyber wars, here's a site that reports cyber wars.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nxq9c4Hosh8
See it in action real time
http://map.norsecorp.com/ (http://map.norsecorp.com/)
Quote from: Gigas on August 19, 2015, 11:39:30 PM
Now that the world is full on space wars and cyber wars, here's a site that reports cyber wars.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nxq9c4Hosh8
See it in action real time
http://map.norsecorp.com/ (http://map.norsecorp.com/)
I don't trust that site, as it uses some specific servers that nobody knows if they are representative of real targets. The fact that, as soon as it appeared it was presented by many people as the best way of seeing attacks makes me suspicious. :)
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/cyanide-detected-in-alarmingly-high-levels-near-china-warehouse-blast_55d5aaa2e4b055a6dab2f773?utm_hp_ref=world&kvcommref=mostpopular
Alana Horowitz
Senior Editor, The Huffington Post
Posted: 08/20/2015 07:53 AM EDT | Edited: 08/20/2015 03:55 PM EDT
Alarmingly High Levels Of Cyanide Detected Near China Warehouse Blast
vid at link
Officials inspecting the aftermath of a deadly warehouse explosion in Tianjin, China detected dangerously high levels of cyanide. The Aug. 12 blasts in one of the country's biggest port cities killed at least 114 people and leveled the surrounding area.
Reuters reports that the levels were at least 277 times the standard limit, but according to AFP, the figure was over 350 times that limit.
"Cyanide was detected at eight water monitoring spots inside the warning zone, with levels at one spot exceeding limits by 356 times," an official from China's Ministry of Environmental Protection said, according to CNN. "Cyanide pollution is severe inside the warning zone. Outside the zone overall, the amount of cyanide detected is at normal range," he said.
Local authorities had said on Monday that they were working to clear the area of hazardous chemicals. But when inspectors from the Tianjin Environmental Protection Bureau tested the water around the blast site on Tuesday, they found alarmingly high levels of the chemical in several different locations.
The warehouse likely contained around 700 tons of sodium cyanide, which is over 70 times the legal limit, according to the Guardian.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55d5c02f14000077002e376c.jpeg)
Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images
Cyanide poses a huge threat to humans. As Quartz points out, cyanide and water can form a toxic gas called hydrogen cyanide that is dangerous and even deadly when inhaled. When mixed with water, cyanide can combust. Officials worry that rain could trigger more explosions in the same area.
According to Reuters, the warehouse was also closer than allowed to nearby houses.
A top U.N. safety official on Thursday criticized China for not sharing critical information that could have prevented the blast. According to the New York Times, workplace safety issues run rampant across the country.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cc9f611d00002f00144b04.jpeg)
STR via Getty Images
Brand new cars parked in Tianjin port that were badly damaged by the explosions, Aug. 13, 2015.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cca16f1700006e00567664.jpeg)
STR via Getty Images
A damaged police car is seen at the site of the massive explosions in Tianjin on Aug. 13, 2015.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cca170170000b700567665.jpeg)
Smoke is seen out of the broken window of an apartment near the site of the explosions in Tianjin on Aug. 13, 2015.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cca1721700006e00567666.jpeg)
ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images
Cars are burnt out after the explosions at a warehouse in Binhai New Area in Tianjin, on Aug. 13, 2015.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cca1721d00006e00144b10.jpeg)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fire fighters watch partially pink smoke that continues to billow after an explosion at a warehouse in Tianjin, Aug. 13, 2015.
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cca17614000077002e2cc3.jpeg)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A worker stands on a crane near the site of an explosion in Tianjin, Aug. 13, 2015.
many more photos at link
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/cyanide-detected-in-alarmingly-high-levels-near-china-warehouse-blast_55d5aaa2e4b055a6dab2f773?utm_hp_ref=world&kvcommref=mostpopular
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/dead-fish-tianjin_55d6be20e4b0f593f7f6eed3?kvcommref=mostpopular
Dominique Mosbergen
Senior Writer, The Huffington Post
Posted: 08/21/2015 03:41 AM EDT
Thousands Of Dead Fish Wash Up On Tianjin's Shores A Week After Deadly Chemical Explosions
"There has to be a link between the dead fish and the blast. What else could explain the death of so many?"
(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CM6SJETVEAARrkC.jpg)
Crowds gathered on the banks of Tianjin's Haihe River on Thursday, looking agape at the grim and unnerving scene before them: there, washed up on the riverside, were thousands upon thousands of fish -- all dead.
The dead fish were found only a few miles from the scene of the deadly explosions that rocked the Chinese city last Wednesday. The gruesome phenomenon has sparked serious concerns that toxic chemicals from the blast site -- a warehouse that stored at least 2,500 tons of hazardous chemicals -- have leaked into the river.
Chinese officials, however, have denied that the fish deaths are linked to the blasts.
(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CM3iTeQW8AABXOm.jpg)
Military teams are reportedly "still struggling to decontaminate" the blast site more than a week after the explosions, The Guardian reports.
Wastewater runoff near the site of the explosions have been found to contain hundreds of times as much sodium cyanide than is considered "safe." Sodium cyanide is extremely toxic to humans, even in very small quantities.
Chinese authorities, however, have insisted that water samples taken from the river where the dead fish were found on Thursday did not contain toxic levels of cyanide. The fish were found about four miles from the blast site.
Deng Xiaowen, head of Tianjin's environment monitoring center, said the agency would launch an investigation into the fish deaths. He maintained, however, that "it was not uncommon for fish to die en masse in local rivers during summer, due to poor water quality," per The Guardian.
Despite such assurances, residents of the area have expressed skepticism.
"I've never seen anything like it," Wang Lei, a 47-year-old man at the river banks Thursday, told the New York Times. "There has to be a link between the dead fish and the blast. What else could explain the death of so many?"
At least 114 people were killed and hundreds of others were injured in last week's explosions, which were so powerful that "cars melted and homes crumbled." According to ABC News, 70 people are still missing.
As residents continue to demand answers and compensation for their damaged property, Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed to thoroughly investigate the disaster.
"The incident has caused heavy casualties and property loss," he said at a Politburo meeting Thursday, per the New York Times. "It was a profound lesson paid with blood."
Quote from: space otter on August 21, 2015, 04:43:52 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/cyanide-detected-in-alarmingly-high-levels-near-china-warehouse-blast_55d5aaa2e4b055a6dab2f773?utm_hp_ref=world&kvcommref=mostpopular
Alana Horowitz
Senior Editor, The Huffington Post
Posted: 08/20/2015 07:53 AM EDT | Edited: 08/20/2015 03:55 PM EDT
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55cc9f611d00002f00144b04.jpeg)
STR via Getty Images
Brand new cars parked in Tianjin port that were badly damaged by the explosions, Aug. 13, 2015.
Look how those cars look like they were crushed with roofs caved in, burnt out and hoods missing showing no engines. Perhaps China builds cars with no engines and parks them in the port for export where the final destination inserts the engines. I don't think so.
There we go again, all China 911 with burnt out cars and motors disintegrated out of the vehicles. We saw the same thing with Americas 911 where cars and trucks burnt up and witness reported engine blocks turned to molten metal running out from under the vehicles.
I remember those pictures but google does not show them anymore.
Guess those pics have been scrubbed from the net.
ya just gotta look harder.. they're therehttp://www.henrymakow.com/911_-_nukes_caused_this_devast.html
(http://www.henrymakow.com/dennis10.jpg)
All of these cars have unexplainable similar damage: Paint gone, instant rusting, and all of their door handles and engine blocks are missing!
A squad car on FDR drive with wilted doors, burned paint, instant rust and no door handles or engine block.
(http://www.henrymakow.com/dennis11.jpg)
http://www.drjudywood.com/articles/DEW/StarWarsBeam5.html
Figure 66. Toasted cars in a lot near the WTC.
(http://www.drjudywood.com/articles/DEW/dewpics/Image8.jpg)
Quote from: Gigas on August 21, 2015, 07:48:18 PM
Look how those cars look like they were crushed with roofs caved in, burnt out and hoods missing showing no engines.
I think the engines are there, only fallen from the supports. And that's the only model in which the hood is missing, in all the photos I have seen all other models have the hood.
QuotePerhaps China builds cars with no engines and parks them in the port for export where the final destination inserts the engines. I don't think so.
Most (if not all) of the cars on that port were imported.
Quote from: space otter on August 21, 2015, 06:46:37 PM
Thousands Of Dead Fish Wash Up On Tianjin's Shores A Week After Deadly Chemical Explosions
(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CM6SJETVEAARrkC.jpg)
Many years ago in Toronto my dad and I went SMELT FISHING at the mouth of the Don River. At a certain time of year, like Salmon... the smelt go up river in huge hoards to spwan... and then die.
You are allowed to catch them as they head up river. You use big nets called Smelt Nets... the common ones in Canada are big squares something like this
(http://image.dhgate.com/albu_394825488_00-1.0x0/durable-nylon-eels-shrimp-crab-trap-cast.jpg)
Typical scene during a smelt run on many rivers around the world
(http://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/tdn.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/4/35/43593a80-f76b-11df-a9c6-001cc4c03286/4cec6c1f00a56.preview-300.jpg)
During the night they go into a spwaning fewnzy on the beach and river shores
(http://www.crescentrockbeach.org/PICTURES/PIX_2009-08_ROCK_REPORT_Surf_Smelt_Spawning.jpg)
Then they die off by the MILLIONS
(http://www.dcclothesline.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Dead-fish-california-600x385.jpg)
And all the conspiracy sites use these images :P
Yet it is a NATURAL annual event... stinks like heck for a few days but the seagulls have a FEAST
(http://drowningworms.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/beautifulbirdpics.blogspot.sg201201pictures-of-birds-catching-fish.html.jpg)
When will a blogger or somebody in the tianjin city do radiation test and report if there is radiation around the port. I looked at nuclear blast and they did to cars then what we see here now. Although this maybe a new type of nuclear weapon that leaves no radiation. It still looks likea nuke went off with all that destruction.
By the way, that super computer tianhe A1 was only 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) away from the blast and suffered structural damage so it was shut down for several days. Those super computers maybe used to target space weapons platforms as well as target other countries not friends with China.
Quote from: space otter on August 21, 2015, 09:47:09 PM
ya just gotta look harder.. they're there
http://www.henrymakow.com/911_-_nukes_caused_this_devast.html
(http://www.henrymakow.com/dennis10.jpg)
All of these cars have unexplainable similar damage: Paint gone, instant rusting, and all of their door handles and engine blocks are missing!
A squad car on FDR drive with wilted doors, burned paint, instant rust and no door handles or engine block.
(http://www.henrymakow.com/dennis11.jpg)
http://www.drjudywood.com/articles/DEW/StarWarsBeam5.html
Figure 66. Toasted cars in a lot near the WTC.
(http://www.drjudywood.com/articles/DEW/dewpics/Image8.jpg)
I remember seeing pics of cars with the engine compartment empty and metal pooled in front of the vehicles. The question was asked then, what could do this to iron blocks and why was the engines burned to molten metal and not the whole. They also showed wheels that melted to puddles and some had the tops caved in from heat which could only pull the roof in while the windows still were intact to create the vacuum.
Quote from: Gigas on August 22, 2015, 12:07:05 AM
I remember seeing pics of cars with the engine compartment empty and metal pooled in front of the vehicles. The question was asked then, what could do this to iron blocks and why was the engines burned to molten metal and not the whole. They also showed wheels that melted to puddles and some had the tops caved in from heat which could only pull the roof in while the windows still were intact to create the vacuum.
Were they IRON blocks? A lot of import cars use cast ALUMINUM blocks and many American cars are doing the same. Car door handles are usually an aluminum diecast metals as are wheel rims (Mags are aluminum magnesium alloys)
The car images Otter posted are from Dr Judy Woods site... Her main contention was that 9/11 was done by a particle beams and she had enough evidence to take it to court. It was not thrown out for being a frivolous law suit (which in itself would have been a federal offence)
Raytech among others were cited as defendants
I do not know the exact effects of a particle beam weapon but I know they already had a big one in White Sands in 1972
THIS one
(http://www.thelivingmoon.com/47john_lear/04images/White_Sands/27-C03-20%20NPG.jpg)
Quote from: zorgon on August 22, 2015, 12:25:13 AM
Were they IRON blocks? A lot of import cars use cast ALUMINUM blocks and many American cars are doing the same. Car door handles are usually an aluminum diecast metals as are wheel rims (Mags are aluminum magnesium alloys)
The car images Otter posted are from Dr Judy Woods site... Her main contention was that 9/11 was done by a particle beams and she had enough evidence to take it to court. It was not thrown out for being a frivolous law suit (which in itself would have been a federal offence)
Raytech among others were cited as defendants
I do not know the exact effects of a particle beam weapon but I know they already had a big one in White Sands in 1972
THIS one
(http://www.thelivingmoon.com/47john_lear/04images/White_Sands/27-C03-20%20NPG.jpg)
They may have had particle beam devices back in the 40s. In the book Marys monkee there is a story of Dr Oschner who secretly run a particle beam device on a campus. It was three stories in height with a contained basement in the building that housed the main device. Dr Mary Sherman was killed by something that blew her left arm off along with her left body opening up showing the insides. Probably she had the particle beam turned on her. She was taken back to her room and investigators know she was not killed there.
There was a single man who built these devices for secret operations. Ill have to look in the book for this. I think it was located on a campus in California while being under government control with armed guards protecting the location.
A cathode ray tube is a particle beam generator. :)
Quote from: Gigas on August 22, 2015, 12:51:26 AM
In the book Marys monkee there is a story of Dr Oschner who secretly run a particle beam device on a campus. It was three stories in height with a contained basement in the building that housed the main device. Dr Mary Sherman was killed by something that blew her left arm off along with her left body opening up showing the insides. Probably she had the particle beam turned on her. She was taken back to her room and investigators know she was not killed there
Interesting Never heard that one... I do recall the AIDS thing being a created virus from Monkeys and released in HAITI at the time.. live when it happened and Aids became known to the worlf
QuoteHaslam has woven Sherman's murder into a conspiracy tale involving a clandestine mouse laboratory operated by David Ferrie on Louisiana Parkway; a heavily guarded linear accelerator located Uptown; monkeys from Tulane Medical School; a young high school science fair winner and Lee Harvey Oswald's secret lover; and a plot to kill Fidel Castro with cancer causing monkey cells orchestrated by a right wing marriage between Carlos Marcello and Alton Ochsner, Sr. – the stealth viruses were then dumped in Haiti where they simmered for almost two decades before erupting into a worldwide epidemic of various cancers and AIDS.
QuoteEven more fascinating to Keith were the burn injuries. I can remember Keith reading me the autopsy report over the telephone a couple of decades after Sherman's death. A copy of this autopsy report is reprinted in Haslam's book.
The only remaining portion of Sherman's right arm was a piece of her upper arm bone. The rest of the extremity was burned to a crisp. The body was discovered in Sherman's bedroom and the bed was smoldering. However, neither Keith nor Haslam believed the fire was intense enough to have caused almost complete thermal destruction of an arm.
Haslam hypothesizes that government forces installed a huge clandestine linear accelerator on the Uptown grounds of the old U.S. Public Health Hospital. Sherman conducted experiments there to mutate monkey viruses to assist a CIA plot headed by Ochsner to mutate monkey viruses. Something went wrong with the linear accelerator and Sherman suffered a severe but non-fatal burn. If she had been taken to an emergency room, the nature of her burn injuries would've exposed their occult plot. One of her comrades sacrificed her with a knife wound to her chest. Her charred body was then moved to her apartment, more stab wounds were inflicted to make it look like a crazed sex killing and then her bed and body were set on fire.
http://www.myneworleans.com/New-Orleans-Magazine/July-2007/Dr-Marys-monkey/
Quote from: Gigas on August 22, 2015, 12:02:56 AM
When will a blogger or somebody in the tianjin city do radiation test and report if there is radiation around the port. I looked at nuclear blast and they did to cars then what we see here now. Although this maybe a new type of nuclear weapon that leaves no radiation. It still looks likea nuke went off with all that destruction.
By the way, that super computer tianhe A1 was only 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) away from the blast and suffered structural damage so it was shut down for several days. Those super computers maybe used to target space weapons platforms as well as target other countries not friends with China.
Now you have me back into the possible radiation world. I see similarities. Chemicals can do the same thing...what if it was a nuclear device and the the side explosion was the effect that also triggered wwhat was in the chemical explosion to get a magnified affect? Just wild guessing on my part.
Quote from: spacemaverick on August 22, 2015, 06:28:37 AM
Now you have me back into the possible radiation world. I see similarities. Chemicals can do the same thing...what if it was a nuclear device and the the side explosion was the effect that also triggered wwhat was in the chemical explosion to get a magnified affect? Just wild guessing on my part.
Why couldn't it have been a chemical explosion? Any signs that it couldn't be?
Quote from: Gigas on August 22, 2015, 12:07:05 AM
I remember seeing pics of cars with the engine compartment empty and metal pooled in front of the vehicles. The question was asked then, what could do this to iron blocks and why was the engines burned to molten metal and not the whole. They also showed wheels that melted to puddles and some had the tops caved in from heat which could only pull the roof in while the windows still were intact to create the vacuum.
Well these cars don't have iron engine blocks...it's mostly aluminum and plastic. Probably lots of newer composite materials in the rest of the car too. They sure don't make them like they used to. A fire on your engine now days likely means the vehicle will be a write off.
another chemical plant..starting to sound like someone is pissedhttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/china-chemical-explosion_55d88ddee4b04ae497036935?kvcommref=mostpopular
Reuters
Posted: 08/22/2015 11:09 AM EDT | Edited: 2 hours ago
Explosion Hits Chemical Plant In East China
The explosion comes days after two huge blasts in Tianjin killed at least 121 people.
SHANGHAI, Aug 22 (Reuters) - An explosion hit a chemical plant on Saturday night in eastern China, the official Xinhua state news agency said, citing local authorities.
No fatalities were reported, Xinhua said, citing local police, although nine people were injured and taken to hospital.
The blast, which triggered a fire, happened around 8.50pm local time in Huantai county in Shandong province.
(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CNBWDshWwAAbWId.jpg)
People's Daily,China
? ?@PDChina
BREAKING: Residential area is less than 1km from the blast of the chemical plant in Huantai County, Shandong Province
10:52 AM - 22 Aug 2015
The explosion occurred at a factory of Shandong's Runxing Chemical company which is a subsidiary of Runxing Group and has 200 million yuan ($31 million) in registered capital, Xinhua reported.
The factory produced adiponitrile, a colorless liquid that releases poisonous gases when it reacts with fire, the People's Daily said, citing the state-run Beijing Times.
Seven fire brigades consisting of a total of 150 fire fighters and 20 fire engines were sent to the scene and fire brigades that are trained to work with fires involving chemicals are being dispatched, Xinhua said.
Windows shattered in the village where the blast occurred, state media said, and tremors reverberated within 2 kilometers (1 mile) of the site of the explosion.
This explosion in eastern China comes after two huge blasts ripped through a warehouse storing dangerous chemicals in Tianjin, the world's 10th-largest port, on Aug. 12 killing at least 121 people.
People's Daily,China ?@PDChina · 5h5 hours ago
Shandong Blast: Photos of the scene where a chemical plant exploded on Sat. Residential area is nearby
(https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CNBUiFFWUAA9MmA.jpg)
Quote from: ArMaP on August 22, 2015, 01:23:18 AM
A cathode ray tube is a particle beam generator. :)
True BUT you need to amplify it a bit if you want to use it from space :P
Quote from: space otter on August 22, 2015, 09:16:07 PM
another chemical plant..starting to sound like someone is pissed
That is a bit much to be coincidence expecially after Chinajust devalued its currency
Why China's Devaluation, While Small, Is Bad News For The Global Economy
http://www.forbes.com/sites/steveforbes/2015/08/19/why-chinas-devaluation-while-small-is-bad-news-for-the-global-economy/
Global currency wars: why China's devaluation is a peace offering misunderstood by the world
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11813076/Global-currency-wars-why-Chinas-devaluation-is-a-peace-offering-misunderstood-by-the-world.html
Guess what, another super computer is located in Jinan which is part of Shangdon province.
The National Supercomputing Center in Jinan operates the Sunway BlueLight MPP supercomputer that runs at 795 teraflops.
Looking at google earth Jinan is straight south of Tianjin by 340 kilometers and a 1 hour 46 min drive.
hey Gigas
where is the next chem plant close to a supercomputer.??????
Early 50s nuke test with cars.
This looks crumpled from instant heat but not burnt.
(http://s29.postimg.org/co93hc7fb/nuked_car1.jpg)
This car was incinerated. Why some cars burn up and others don't is not clear to me.
(http://s7.postimg.org/pl8t4fw2j/nuked_car.jpg)
We do see Tianjin cars incinerated while others are hardly touched. Wheels are melted off, plastic front ends melted away, motors gone. I still go with a mini nuke.
Here is a calculated estimate for a 6 ton nuclear blast over the port of Tianjin. Looks well within what we see destroyed at the port.
(http://s14.postimg.org/hxoc3u7ch/blast.jpg)
Do your own estimating a nuclear blast radius.
http://nuclearsecrecy.com/nukemap/ (http://nuclearsecrecy.com/nukemap/)
Quote from: space otter on August 22, 2015, 11:31:53 PM
hey Gigas
where is the next chem plant close to a supercomputer.??????
The location list of the super computers in China
Tianjin
The National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin is one of the main centers. It houses the Tianhe-I supercomputer which in October 2010 became the top speed record holder in the world by consistently operating at 2.507 petaflops. The Tianjin Computer Institute had been active as far back as 1984 when it developed the 16-bit TQ-0671 microcomputer system. A commercial affiliate of the Tianjin center had previously made the PHPC100 personal supercomputer in 2008 which was about twice the size of a normal desktop computer, but had 40 times the speed. In 2010 a second generation model was released.
Beijing
The Supercomputing Center of the China Academy of Sciences (SCCAS) provides academic support functions to the National Centers.
Shenzhen
The National Supercomputing Center in Shenzhen houses the second fastest machine in China, and the third fastest in the world. In May 2010 the Nebulae computer in Shenzhen placed second on the Top 500 supercomputer list, after the Cray computer at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee.
Shanghai
The Shanghai Supercomputer Center operates the Magic Cube supercomputer that runs at 230 teraflops.
Jinan
The National Supercomputing Center in Jinan operates the Sunway BlueLight MPP supercomputer that runs at 795 teraflops.
Hunan
The National Supercomputing Center in Hunan operates the Tianhe-1A Hunan Solution - NUDT YH MPP supercomputer that runs at 1342 teraflops.
Guangzhou
The National Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou operates the (currently, 13 November 2013) top-ranked supercomputer in the world Tianhe-2 (MilkyWay-2), which runs at 33,000 teraflops. It also operates the Tianhe-1A Guangzhou Solution - NUDT YH MPP supercomputer that runs at 211 teraflops.
Changsha
Foundations for a new major branch of the National Supercomputing Center (???????? Guóji? Ch?ojíjìsuàn Zh?ngx?n) were laid in Changsha on 28 November 2010.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercomputing_in_China (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercomputing_in_China)
Quote from: space otter on August 22, 2015, 11:31:53 PM
hey Gigas
where is the next chem plant close to a supercomputer.??????
Here's the list of the Chinese cities where they have supercomputers:
Tianjin
Beijing
Shenzhen
Shanghai
Jinan
Hunan
Guangzhou
Changsha
I suppose most of those may have chemical plants, considering that they are mostly in industrial areas.
Edit: I see I was too slow posting the list, Gigas was faster. :)
and here's the chem com list..it's a long one..all have links to them if you go to the list site
http://www.infoseekchina.com/Industries/chemicals.html
Chemical Companies in China | News
Anhui Annada Titanium Industry Co., Ltd.
Anhui Annada Titanium Industry manufactures and markets titanium dioxide and related chemical products.
Anhui Huaxing Chemical Industry Co., Ltd.
Anhui Huaxing Chemical Industry manufactures pesticides, fungicides, phytocides, and other chemical products.
Beijing ShuangHuan WeiYe Reagent Corporation Limited
It's main business is producing inorganic and organic chemical reagents, biochemical reagents and related products.
Billions Chemical Co., Ltd.
Billions Chemical is a comprehensive inorganic chemical enterprise.
Blue Star New Chemical Material Co., Ltd.
Blue Star New Chemical Material is principally engaged in the manufacture and distribution of new chemical materials.
Changshu Leauge Chemical Co., Ltd.
Changshu Leauge Chemical is a pharmaceutical, hair dye and chemical provider.
China BlueChemical Ltd.
China BlueChemical Limited or China BlueChemical is the largest nitrogenous fertilizer manufacturer in China.
China Lumena New Materials Corp.
China Lumena New Materials is a new materials and chemical enterprise in China and the poly phenylene sulfide (PPS) resin producer.
China National Chemical Corporation
China National Chemical (ChemChina) is involved in agrochemicals, rubber products, chemical materials and speciality chemicals, industrial equipment...
Chongqing Better Industrial & Trading Co., Ltd.
Chongqing Better Industrial & Trading is engaged in the manufacturing and trading of chemicals in domestic and foreign markets.
Dymatic Chemicals, Inc.
Dymatic Chemicals is a China based company engaged in the manufacture and sale of fine chemical products.
Fujian Ninghua Lifeng Chemical Co., Ltd.
Fujian Ninghua Lifeng Chemical is one of the two largest chemical enterprises based on the production of rosin chemicals and their derivatives...
Gemhold SJZ Trading Co.,Ltd.
Gemhold is a manufacturer and exporter of inorganic and organic chemicals, food and feed additives, intermediates and pharmaceuticals...
Guangdong Zhongcheng Chemicals Co., Ltd.
Guangdong Zhongcheng Chemicals is the largest sodium hydrosulphite manufacturer and exporter.
Guizhou Sino-Phos Chemical Co., Ltd.
Guizhou Sino-Phos Chemical is one of the leading manufacturers and exporters of phosphate chemicals in China.
Hebei Chromate Chemical Co., Ltd.
Hebei Chromate Chemical is one of the largest producers and exporters of chromate chemicals in China.
Hebei Maoyuan Chemical Co., Ltd.
Hebei Maoyuan Chemical produces cellulose ethers, cephlosporin intermediates, expandable graphite and nano ferric oxide...
Hebei Smart Chemicals Co., Ltd.
Hebei Smart Chemicals is a manufacturer of chemicals and pharmaceuticals.
Hebei Xihai Group Co., Ltd.
Hebei Xihai Group is involved in technology research and trade of dyestuff chemicals, fertilizer and glass fiber reinforced glass.
Hebei Yanuo Chemical Industry Co., Ltd.
Hebei Yanuo Chemical Industry is one of the leading manufacturers of thiochemicals and pyridines in China.
Henan Hongye Chemical Company Ltd.
Henan Hongye Chemical is a chemical company whose main product are thiourea dioxide, sodium percarbonate, furfuryl alcohol, furfural, thiourea...
Jiangsu Hongda New Material Co., Ltd.
Jiangsu Hongda New Material is primarily engaged in the research, manufacture and sales of high temperature resistant silicone rubber products.
Jiangsu Yangnong Chemical Co., Ltd.
Jiangsu Yangnong Chemical is a manufacturer of pesticides.
Kee Shing Holdings Ltd.
The core trading business involves electroplating metals and chemicals, stainless steel, chemical solutions, paints and coating chemicals.
Kingboard Chemical Holdings Ltd.
Kingboard Chemical Holdings manufactures laminates, copper foil, glass fabric, glass yarn, bleached kraft paper, printed circuit boards, and chemicals.
Kingfa Sci. & Tech. Co., Ltd.
Kingfa Sci. & Tech. is principally engaged in the research, development, production and sale of modified plastic products.
Mingding Chemical Co., Ltd.
Mingding Chemical plant is a research and production integrated fine chemical enterprise located in Daming county, Hebei province.
Nanjing Hongbaoli Corporation Ltd.
Nanjing Hongbaoli is a manufacturer of chemical raw materials. The Company's main products include blended polyols, isopropanolamine, cement admixture...
Nanning Chemical Industry Co., Ltd.
Nanning Chemical Industry Co., Ltd. develops, manufactures, and markets organic and inorganic industrial chemicals.
Nantong Jiangshan Agrochemical & Chemicals Co., Ltd
Nantong Jiangshan Agrochemical & Chemical is principally engaged in the manufacture, processing and sale of fertilizers, organic chemical products...
Ningxia Yinglite Chemical Co., Ltd.
Yinglite Chemical engages in the manufacture and sale of various chemicals.
Qingdao Soda Ash Industrial Company Ltd.
Qingdao Soda Ash Industrial Company Ltd. manufactures and markets soda ash, fertilizers, and pesticides.
Richangsheng Import and Export Corp., Ltd
Richangsheng Import and Export is a manufacturer and exporter of inorganic and organic chemicals, food additives...
Sanonda Zhengzhou Pesticide Co., Ltd.
They are a manufacturer, processor and trader of agrochemicals.
Shaanxi Xinghua Chemistry Co., Ltd.
Shaanxi Xinghua Chemistry is a China based company primarily engaged in the manufacture and sale of chemical products and chemical fertilizers.
Shanghai 3F New Materials Company Limited
Shanghai 3F New Materials Company Limited is principally engaged in industrial and commercial industries.
Shanghai Chemical Industry Park
Shanghai Chemical Industry Park is the first industrial zone specialized in the development of petrochemical and fine chemistry businesses...
Shanghai Jianyuan Chemical Co., Ltd.
The company has experience in the manufacture of alcohol series products which can satisfy different demands.
Shanxi Coking Co., Ltd.
Shanxi Coking Co., Ltd. manufactures and markets metallurgical coke, ammonium sulfate, industrial naphthalene, and other chemical products.
Shenyang Research Institute of Chemical Industry
They are mainly involved in research and development of fine chemicals such as agrichemicals, dyestuffs, intermediates, adjuvants, & related technology...
Sichuan Blue Sword Chemical Group Co., Ltd.
Blue Sword Chemical specializes in the production of fine phosphates. They have phosphate mines in southwest China.
Sinochem Group
Sinochem Corp. primarily deals in the distribution of petrochemicals, but also in rubber, plastics, and agrochemicals.
Sinochem Hebei Corporation
Sinochem Hebei mainly deal in water-treatment chemicals, feed & food additives, biochemicals & pharmaceutical products.
Sinoma Science & Technology Co., Ltd.
Sinoma Science & Technology is primarily engaged in research, design, manufacture and sale of specialty fiber composite materials.
Tianjin Kermel Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd.
Tianjin Kermel Chemical Reagent mainly produces fine chemicals.
Wanhua Chemical Group Co., Ltd.
Wanhua Chemical Group is principally engaged in the manufacture and distribution of chemical products.
Wujiang Zhenrong Chemical Co., Ltd.
Wujiang Zhenrong Chemical mainly produces dye intermediates, pharmaceutical intermediates, organic solvents and some special chemicals.
Xiangtan Electrochemical Scientific Co., Ltd.
Xiangtan Electrochemical Scientific is principally engaged in the research, development, production and sale of electrolytic manganese dioxide...
Xinxiang Yangyuan Chemical Co., Ltd.
Xinxiang Yangyuan Chemical is a manufacturer of lead salt products.
Xinjiang Zhongtai Chemical Co., Ltd. SHE:002092 Chemicals
Xinjiang Zhongtai Chemical is a engaged in the manufacture and sale of chemical raw materials.
Yunnan Yunwei Company Limited
Yunwei is engaged in the production, processing and sale of coal coke products, chemical products, construction materials and chemical fertilizers.
Zhejiang Hangzhou Xinfu Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
Zhejiang Hangzhou Xinfu Pharmaceutical is primarily engaged in production and sale of fine chemical and health care products.
Zhejiang Huafon Spandex Co., Ltd.
Huafon Spandex is principally engaged in the research, development, manufacture, processing and sale of polyurethane fibers...
Zhejiang Jiangshan Chemical Co., Ltd.
Zhejiang Jiangshan Chemical is engaged in the development, production and distribution of chemical products.
Zhejiang Transfar Co., Ltd.
Zhejiang Transfar is principally engaged in the manufacture and sale of textile dyeing auxiliaries and chemical oil agents for leather.
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Quote from: Gigas on August 22, 2015, 11:35:53 PM
Early 50s nuke test with cars.
This looks crumpled from instant heat but not burnt.
(http://s29.postimg.org/co93hc7fb/nuked_car1.jpg)
No, it looks crumpled from the air pressure of the blast.
QuoteI still go with a mini nuke.
Why, what do these explosions have that make it more likely to have been nuclear than chemical?
QuoteHere is a calculated estimate for a 6 ton nuclear blast over the port of Tianjin. Looks well within what we see destroyed at the port.
Is there a calculator like that for chemical explosions? I'm sure we only had to find the right amount of explosives to reach the same result.
you have to go to the link to enlarge and watch the vid..interestingly they are speaking english
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-33933352
Video captures fear of China blast eyewitnesses
14 August 2015 Last updated at 12:08 BST
Footage of two massive explosions in the Chinese city of Tianjin, taken by a stunned eyewitness, captured the fear and terror of those who saw what happened.
Dozens of people died and hundreds were injured when a warehouse owned by a company specialising in handling hazardous goods caught fire and exploded.
City officials say they still did not know what materials were at the warehouse at the time of the fire, or what caused the blasts.
Eyewitness Dan van Duren filmed the moment of the explosions, before he and others fled to avoid the danger.
Read more
China blasts: Tianjin port city rocked by explosions
Quote from: space otter on August 23, 2015, 01:59:51 AM
you have to go to the link to enlarge and watch the vid..interestingly they are speaking english
I have the original without the bleeps but is sounds like they are laughing...
American businessman and family staying on site
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cO1q3HwB0y0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cO1q3HwB0y0
Tianjin had a super computer go offline for three or four days from extensive building damage from the blast. The building was roughly 1.2 miles from the blast. I did a nuclear blast projection for a 5kilo nuke and the blast radius fit the 2 mile radius of destruction.
Now, space otter reports another explosion at shandong where another super computer is located in Jinan, a suburb of shandong. They put a lid on that event so we don't know whats going on there.
Now we have an explosion at a military base in Japan with little information on that one.
I found, back in February 2015 the united states put the china super computers on an entity list for nuclear explosive activities. Intel was told they have to file for a license permit to export their Exon processors to china. Amd and other chip makers were told the same thing.
Intel filed for the permit, and was denied export permission and the United States slapped a chip embargo on china to include AMD and other chip manufactures from export to china.
The china super computers are used for space exploration and it appears nuclear weapons activity as reported by national security of the United States.
Section 15 cfr 744.2 - Restrictions on certain nuclear end-uses. which includes russia and now china.
People's Republic of China, meet the guidelines
# listed under § 744.11(b): Entities for which there is reasonable
# cause to believe, based on specific and articulated facts, that
# an entity has been involved, is involved, or poses a significant
# risk of being or becoming involved in activities that are contrary
# to the national security or foreign policy interests of the United
# States and those acting on behalf of such entities may be added
# to the Entity List pursuant to this section.
http://beowulf.org/pipermail/beowulf/2015-April/033167.html
Looks like we are at star/cyber wars
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/tianjin-explosions-suspects-arrested_55de6671e4b0e7117ba8d6d3?kvcommref=mostpopular
Reuters
Posted: 08/26/2015 09:29 PM EDT
Chinese Police Arrest 12 Suspects In Tianjin Blasts, State Media Reports
(http://img.huffingtonpost.com//asset/scalefit_630_noupscale/55de67c31700004301568b37.jpeg)
SHANGHAI, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Chinese police have arrested 12 people suspected of involvement in this month's massive explosions in the city of Tianjin that killed 139 people and devastated the port area, the state-run Xinhua news agency said on Thursday.
Among those arrested were the chairman, vice-chairman and three deputy general managers of the logistics company that had been storing the chemicals that blew up, the agency said, quoting police. It did not say who the rest were.
The news comes a day after China sacked the head of its work safety regulator for suspected corruption. (Reporting by John Ruwitch; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
..............................
http://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1207739-20150827.htm
Mainland police arrest 12 over Tianjin blasts
2015-08-27 HKT 09:11
(http://newsstatic.rthk.hk/images/mfile_1207739_1_L_20150827091139.jpg)
Part of Tianjin's port area was devastated by the blast. Photo: Reuters
The Xinhua news agency says mainland police have arrested 12 suspects allegedly linked to the massive blasts at a warehouse storing dangerous chemicals in Tianjin earlier this month. The explosions killed 139 people and devastated the city's port area.
The 12 include the chairman of Tianjin International Ruihai Logistics, Yu Xuewei, vice-chairman Dong Shexuan, and the company's three deputy general managers.