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Artist : Mocoa (pixiv / twitter)
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#interview with the vampire#iwtv#amc tvl#jacob anderson#sam reid

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** Permission to post it was granted by the artist Do not repost/edit the art without permission Please, support the artist on their pages too **
Artist : Mocoa (pixiv / twitter)
Source
On The Road / Columbia
1 apr 2017
To Columbia from Ecuador by Bus, Colectivo, Taxi and Foot...
Quito -> Tulcan -> Ipiales -> Pasto -> Mocoa -> Fin del Mundo
48 Hours Journey
James donated 60 tonnes of food, water and clothing to the victims of the Colombian tragedy in Mocoa.
Colombian slide disaster: Here's how the 'debris flow' likely occurred
A lethal mix of gravity, water and dirt combined to create an “avalanche” that tore through a small Colombian city, killing more than 200.
What happened in Mocoa is known as a “debris flow,” which came during an unusually wet season, topped off with a shorter period of intense rain, federal landslide scientist Jonathan Godt said. He said he reviewed images and video of the Mocoa disaster, noting the mountains surrounding the city.
“That very heavy rainfall makes the soil like goo, makes it easy to flow. It just starts sliding down the hillside,” said Godt, coordinator of the U.S. Geological Survey’s landslide hazards program. “My guess is that it was moving very fast and would have been full of rock and boulders and pieces of buildings. For someone experiencing it, an avalanche would be a very accurate description.”
Witnesses reporting hearing buildings shuddering and vibrating as the flow crashed through Mocoa. Scores remain missing since the deluge struck after midnight Saturday when many people were sleeping, washing away trees, vehicles, houses and everything in its path. Pictures posted to social media show bridges wiped away, piles of debris in the town center and overturned vehicles tumbled amid tree limbs, rocks and fencing.
During the pre-dawn hours of 1 April 2017, heavy rain triggered flash flooding and landslides in the city of Mocoa, in the department of Putumayo, southwestern Colombia. As of 4 April, the death toll has gone up to 290 people, including 144 children. More than 400 have been injured and 441 others are still missing, which is why casualties may increase in the next days.
President Juan Manuel Santos declared a state of emergency. More than 2,500 personnel —including 1,400 soldiers and 800 police officers— are scouring debris for survivors. Mocoa and a big portion of Putumayo have no electricity service. Water service has also been affected in the city.
On-going donation efforts are aimed to people living in Colombia and Colombians living outside the country, which is why all of them are published and promoted in Spanish. However, if you still want to help, you can donate water (super useful right now) at Litros que Ayudan, to UNICEF Colombia (focused on children and teenagers) and the Colombian Red Cross. On the last website, they also offer information on donations through international bank accounts.
Really? i watched in the tags /colombia mudslide and /colombia landslide and there are literally 4 post each? Did tumblr really slept onto a 250 deads disaster??
Dios perdona, los hombres algunas veces, pero la naturaleza nunca.
Mocoa-Putumayo.
duele Mocoa