Posted on 11/26/2002 8:13:06 PM PST by Mo1
You must start feeling their pain....
Hmmm...why does this woman remind me of my sister?
*Barfing hairballs*
We've come to expect that from our Northern neighbors lately...
:-)
It may be....
"Wile E. Coyote.....GENIUS"
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Earthquake Bulletin |
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Date-Time | 2002 11 27 21:20:54 UTC | ![]() |
Location | 44.15N 105.36W | ||
Depth | 0.0 kilometers | ||
Magnitude | 3.5 | ||
Region | WYOMING MINE BLAST | ||
Reference | 10 miles (20 km) SE of Gillette, Wyoming 50 miles (85 km) WSW of Sundance, Wyoming 60 miles (100 km) WNW of Newcastle, Wyoming 210 miles (340 km) N of CHEYENNE, Wyoming |
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Source | USGS NEIC |
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Theoretical P-Wave Travel Times
Historical Moment Tensor Solutions
Earthquake Information for WYOMING Current information about the rate at which earthquakes occur in different areas, and on how far strong shaking extends from the earthquake source. |
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NB: The region name is an automatically generated name from the Flinn-Engdahl (F-E) seismic and geographical regionalization scheme. The boundaries of these regions are defined at one-degree intervals and therefore differ from irregular political boundaries. More->
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey Privacy Statement || Disclaimer || FOIA || Accessibility USGS National Earthquake Information Center |
There are a couple of coal strip mines in Wyoming that blast the overburden off the seam once a week with a charge so large it has to be reported beforehand to the Russians so they won't think it was a nuclear test. It shows up on seismographs all over the world.
So9
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