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Earthquake in Indiana?

Posted on 12/30/2010 5:27:42 AM PST by ducttape45

Here in Indiana, near Grissom ARB, we just felt what we think was an earthquake. Can anyone confirm?


TOPICS: Chit/Chat
KEYWORDS: 3point8; carmelfault; earthquake; earthquakes; eq; in; indiana; indianapolis; kokomo; midwest; missouri; newmadrid; newmadridfault; prep; preppers; quake; quakes
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To: muawiyah

Yes, this seems to be right on the Cincinnati Arch.


61 posted on 12/30/2010 8:55:50 AM PST by Gondring (Paul Revere would have been flamed as a naysayer troll and told to go back to Boston.)
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To: John W; muawiyah; epithermal
Sorry...I thought the Fortville was up in that area. I’ll shut up now. :-)

On second thought, I won't. I just did a quick check and this looks smack dab on the Fortville.

But I gotta run to try to get someplace by noon...Real time, not FR time, but still will be tight...

62 posted on 12/30/2010 9:00:35 AM PST by Gondring (Paul Revere would have been flamed as a naysayer troll and told to go back to Boston.)
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To: Gondring
There are a couple of plutons in Southern Indiana ~ the ones we know about the most are on a line with Martinsville, Crothersville and Cincinatti. Martinsville used to have a lot of hotsprings. That one is big enough it reaches as far South as Paoli, Indiana and may even be the source of heat for a couple of others just East of Bloomington.

The pluton at Crothersville actually makes its presence known with a CIRCLE that shows in the soil type at the surface. The down wind area in Jennings County Indiana has a feldspar based soil ~ fairly typical of a sort of ancient volcano.

So this sucker has been toking off and on for probably a couple of hundred million years spewing stuff on Jennings County. That suggests there's an even deeper heat source closer to the mantle ~ maybe a plume like the one under under Oregon, Idaho and Wyoming (Yellowstone).

The only advantage to these hot spots is they weld the cracks overhead. Obviously it's not doing a good job gluing the Mississippi faults back together, but maybe this is their cause!

We have an ancient volcanic vent in Fairfax county just like the one at Crothersville. It's been covered over for tens of millions of years, but it is detectable at the surface. The headquarters for the Coast and Geodetic Survey is there ~ and the main driveway out front CIRCLES THE TOP! Very cute way to tell us about it.

63 posted on 12/30/2010 9:18:00 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: Gondring

“Central Indiana is home to a faultline, the Fortville Fault, which runs through Madison and Hancock counties. But IU’s Steinmetz said it was too premature as of 9 a.m. to determine whether the quake originated on the Fortville Fault.”

As a side note, the epicenter was in Howard County I believe.


64 posted on 12/30/2010 10:13:12 AM PST by John W (Natural-born US citizen since 1955)
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To: Kenny Bunk; muawiyah

At first I thought you were being sarcastic, but after looking it up, I see exactly how it works.
Thanks!


65 posted on 12/30/2010 10:35:44 AM PST by nascarnation
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To: nascarnation
See that LOTS OF BRACES part? You won't see much of that in frame buildings in Indiana. And chickenwire wrap? Won't see that either. Florida came up with ways to hurricane proof your home. First thing you do is bolt the roof to the frame. Then, bolt the frame to the foundation. Put in braces.

What they mean by this California standard is LOTS OF BRACES ~ HUGE NUMBERS OF THEM.

And you want these diagonals put in too. Plus, bolt everything together.

It will do well unless you are on a rock (or gravel pile) that takes off down a hill.

66 posted on 12/30/2010 10:48:55 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
The pluton at Crothersville actually makes its presence known with a CIRCLE that shows in the soil type at the surface.

Very interesting! I'm trying to find what you're referring to. What series (or complex/association) are you talking about, the Peoga? Forgive me, but I'm not at all familiar with that area.

The down wind area in Jennings County Indiana has a feldspar based soil ~ fairly typical of a sort of ancient volcano.

Typical for plutonic source, too. Is there other evidence of this being volcanic along with the plutonic?

So this sucker has been toking off and on for probably a couple of hundred million years spewing stuff on Jennings County. That suggests there's an even deeper heat source closer to the mantle ~ maybe a plume like the one under under Oregon, Idaho and Wyoming (Yellowstone).

Suggests to me that someone's timeline is off. Gondwanaland was still together back then, and Jennings County was on Laurasia. I doubt a plume was following Jennings County around the globe. :-)

Are these hypotheses of yours or are they someone else's work? This whole topic will have absolutely no useful or positive impact on my life, so it's just the type of thing that catches my attention!

We have an ancient volcanic vent in Fairfax county just like the one at Crothersville. It's been covered over for tens of millions of years, but it is detectable at the surface. The headquarters for the Coast and Geodetic Survey is there ~ and the main driveway out front CIRCLES THE TOP! Very cute way to tell us about it.

I'm confused by your description. I'm guessing you're referring to the USGS in Fairfax County, Virginia, not Indiana or the NGS...? If so, I think it's near some diabase with surrounding hornfels, but I don't think it's on any sort of volcanic vent, per se. It's just the typical Triassic rifting, and the USGS driveway doesn't circle any of the ones nearby. Or are you referring to a historical location (Coast and Geodetic Survey was absorbed by NOAA decades ago)?


I came across this, which describes Indiana tectonic features.

67 posted on 12/30/2010 12:40:13 PM PST by Gondring (Paul Revere would have been flamed as a naysayer troll and told to go back to Boston.)
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To: John W

Thanks!


68 posted on 12/30/2010 12:41:55 PM PST by Gondring (Paul Revere would have been flamed as a naysayer troll and told to go back to Boston.)
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To: ducttape45

I was on driving on 465 at the time and missed it. I also missed feeling the one back in 1987.


69 posted on 12/30/2010 1:41:56 PM PST by rdl6989 (January 20, 2013- The end of an error.)
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To: muawiyah; nascarnation
Never fails to amaze me that many thousands die in other countries for lack of these basic and cheap techniques.

Muawiyah, I did forget to tell him about bolting everything together, especially the house to the foundation. Diagonals, which we New Englanders call wind-braces, are also crucial. Block walls have to have rebar passing through every course, and through the footing. Would certainly have saved many lives in Haiti.

Lost a house in '94 in Santa Monica. It looked perfect, and not a thing inside even broke, but ... you guessed it ... the ground underneath began drifting and six months later the place started wracking and had to be condemned.
Reckon I didn't get it to the house junkyard fast enough!

In the older parts of town, some big old houses literally jumped off their foundations, and a kid was killed when an old-time brick chimney collapsed into her room.

70 posted on 12/30/2010 2:11:06 PM PST by Kenny Bunk (America can survive fools in office. It cannot long survive the fools who elect them.)
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To: Gondring
The Building still gets identified that way on maps (long after the occupying agency has disappeared into the bowels of a new bureaucracy) ~ yeah, Fairfax is where Iive. I grew up in Indiana.

We call the area "the ten acres" because my Great Grandfather, and on back, owned it. If you get ahold of satellite pictures of the area you can see the circular formation from space ~ it's a soil difference. It affects the plant growth, and you can detect it on the ground as well ~ PLUS, the site has both a cold spring and a hot spring! Paleo-Indians lived there for thousands of years making use of the hot spring.

Part of the site has some glacial till on it ~ called locally "The Knobs". There's a town called Dudleytown at the top of one of the hills.

This site is also the only site in Indiana where you can find native mica as well as copper.

That pretty well covers how ancient the site is ~ but no gold. You have to go about 45 miles NW of there to find gold ~ it's all on hilltops ~ part of the evidence for that comet that may have hit the residual ice sheet in Canada about 11,000 years back (creating the younger Dryas). It hit right on a major gold bearing region in Canada and splashed that stuff all over the lower Midwest.

Getting back to the pluton ~ the surveys into the Cincinatti Arch began revealing some of the structures but I think it's a bit deeper than current info can show. The more recent techniques ~ like the ones used to reveal the plume cutting the Juan de Fuca plate in two under Oregon ~ haven't been used there, but I'd imagine there are plenty of folks who would like to do that pretty soon!

Way back when they had that big quake in Alaska that wiped out downtown Anchorage I just happened to be inside the Geology building at Indiana University ~ on the ground floor. The seizmograph was set up to print out right there in the lobby ~ big open room, hooked up to the machinery, and the arm would swing an inch here, and an inch there, and everything was good.

I thought I'd just watch it a while and the doggone arm went darned near off the graph ~ and came back ~ and went back and so on for HOURS. None of us watching that graph knew what it was about until the next day but we knew a continent had moved. That particular location went straight up about 10 inches over a couple of weeks.

Two things happened as a consequence of that event ~ (1) I decided to never relocate to Anchorage, and (2) I spent a lot of time reading geology texts and reports for therest of my life.

You know the Appalachians have no active volcanic activity. At the same time you get down near the Southern end in Alabama you can find volcanic cones all over the place, particular inand around Anniston and the Talladega National Forest. Had AIT in and amongst some of them so I got to know them well. They appear to have been mid-ocean volcanos that got swept up when the continents smacked together ~ I would imagine some of the hot spots did too.

71 posted on 12/30/2010 2:58:38 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: Kenny Bunk

In Iran people die when their tile roofs crash through their mud brick homes.


72 posted on 12/30/2010 2:59:35 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: hennie pennie; ducttape45
I mean, really, I do better than a magnitude 3.5


73 posted on 12/30/2010 5:16:15 PM PST by Godzilla (3-7-77)
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To: Godzilla

Trust me, it wouldn’t take much to wipe most Indiana cities from the map..........


74 posted on 12/30/2010 7:20:02 PM PST by ducttape45
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To: All

IU Professor: Earthquake was rare for north central Indiana

The earthquake was recorded by the three seismometers at Indiana University’s School of Geology where it picked up the vibration from between 3 and 5 miles below ground. Professor Michael Hamburger immediately knew it was significant.

http://www.fox59.com/news/wxin-iu-professor-earthquake-was-ra-123010,0,2597439.story


75 posted on 12/31/2010 5:50:30 AM PST by John W (Natural-born US citizen since 1955)
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To: John W

That’s an interesting news report. Maybe this is something we should keep an eye on.


76 posted on 12/31/2010 10:27:58 AM PST by ducttape45
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