I have been browsing various official and unofficial radiation counters, and I noticed a very disturbing pattern in the pacific ocean, many radiation detectors were offline during the explosion, for a week period.
I also noticed dramatic increases in the radiation levels on the coasts of the pacific, one even had a reading of 499 but that could be an error.
Most disturbing of all is the official USA detectors are down for "routine maintenance" during that time period and still are down. You can see the missing timeline on their charts right before the increase in radiation.
Another strange "coincidence" is that the FAA shut down all flights in Hawaii and the pacific in that time period.
My theory right now from all the strange coincidences and missing information is that some type of nuclear device was placed into the volcano to create the 10 megatons of explosive force you can witness in the videos of it.
To what end I do not know, but I do know that many things about this are suspicious and do not add up, another coincidence was that North Korea was testing nukes just prior to this explosion.
Unanswered questions, why are the radiation networks down or offline in the pacific, and the few that are online all showing higher than normal radiation?
Why did the FAA ground all flights nearby?
Why do you never see on the media right before the explosion occurs even though it was recorded in other footage?
Another strange thing is how the internet was wiped out after the explosion. Reminds me of EMP.
A lot of strange coincidences at best, some terrifying plan at worst.
A nuclear sub blowing up would not blow up in that fashion. How to put this... a nuke is not like a bag of gunpowder that, if ignited, will kersplode and kill everyone around it. A sub blowing up would go down with its nukes intact, it would not arm the nukes. At least, I assume... i've never been on a nuclear sub so i dont know what the protocol is for sinking subs. My guess is those nukes are expensive and recoverable tho. So if the ship goes down i dont think "set off the nukes" is protocol. But it could be. Maybe if a rival nation had salvage ships in the area and the sinking sub knew its own side would not get to the jettisoned nukes first they would set them off rather than let them fall into enemy hands...