Stay safe, FRiend.
Not in West Florida............too busy with TS Barry........
South Whidbey Island. Didn’t feel anything but was sound asleep when it hit.
There was one reported on FR early this morning.
Having lived in the Seattle area for 46 years, I have this simple rule of thumb: Anything less than a 5.0 doesn’t count. My records won’t even skip...
Couple of recent small after shocks
Democrats blame Trump and call for investigations
I live about a mile-and-a-half north of Seattle, and didn’t feel a thing.
Map suffers from Japanese pixelation disease.
Unfortunately, we’re overdue for a more serious one. The last relatively big one was - I think - in 2001, and we’d had two or three other noticeable ones in the decade before that. I remember one or two in the early 80s, and we had a relatively major one in 1965, I think it was. I was in high school, on the second floor, and we could see the telephone poles waving back-and-forth.
Will they have a new carbon tax by the end of the day ?
Apparently some coffee cups were rattling this morning in Seattle.
Oh good grief...Anything under a 6 isn’t worth mentioning.
15 miles deep.
Its the shallow ones that usually cause problems.
Woke us up and we are 30 miles west of Seattle. The handles on our dresser were rattling like crazy and the dog barked at the “monster”. It was his first earthquake.
The big issue is that just off the Pacific coast between Eureka, CA to the north end of Vancouver Island is the Cascadia Subduction Zone, an area of very high geologic activity. The possibility of a major undersea earthquake like what happened off the northeast coast of Japan in March 2011 is very high, and such a powerful quake could mean major tsunami damage up and down the entire Pacific coastline of North America (imagine San Francisco hit with a 30-foot wave lasting around 10-15 minutes).
Nothing. I slept through it.
I live in Bonney Lake Wa and did not feel it!
Live 30 miles away, didn’t feel it. Literally, a heavy truck going down the street is stronger than a 4.7