Posted on 03/06/2023 3:12:17 PM PST by BenLurkin
On top of the fire demand, the body can’t do much more than 4 days without water.
I remember a big quake out in Landers that just kept rolling and getting stronger and stronger. That one doesn’t get much press because rattlesnakes and dirt were harmed most.
Great song, Great album.
Major roads down and no power or water. That’s a pretty poor situation to be in.
“There was a major one in Missouri I believe in the 1800’s.”
The New Madrid quake. IIRC it made church bells ring in Philadelphia and it made the Mississippi River flow backwards.
I know a friend who was in Big Bear during Landers...A short while later, Big Bear quake hit...He was staying at cabin with 5 other guys. They literally thought the world was coming to an end. Even a stream close by suddenly dried up...
If there is an earthquake in California, who’s fault is it?
Wait until the pools dry up.
The area of the San Andreas between Parkfield and Maricopa almost never shows any activity, even minor shakes, while areas north and south of there are always rumbling and grumbling.
While looking at other quake activity on the map it seems to pivot around that spot. There seems to be a lot of "equal and opposite" reactions ie a 3.0 at Petrolia followed by a 3.0 by the Salton Sea within a short time.
I have nothing concrete to support the following but I suspect, as an engineer, that there is a lot of potential energy being stored in the area where nothing shows and when it goes it will go with a bang.
Why choose? Let them all kick off together.
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SF is the worst place to be in “the big one” imho—especially since things have gone downhill there since the last big quakes
Also there is a large skyscraper that is leaning and they don’t seem to be able to fix it. My guess in a “big one” it will come down.
Much of the build up on the bay side is is re-claimed land and it will most likely turn solid ground into liquid when the big one hits.
https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/what-liquefaction
I hope they have video cameras watching the Millennium Tower 24.7. “TIMBERRRRR....”
After 35 years there, it got so we didn’t roll out of bed for anything < 5.0
I put an earthquake gas valve on the line downstream from our meter as soon as we moved in back in '83. It's a real simple gadget -- a ball gets knocked off its perch and lands on the gas exit hole in the valve. No moving parts except for that one ball.
We rode through the 1989 Loma Prieta quake just fine and it didn't kill our gas.
Note the low-tech "level" to get the valve properly mounted. Anybody living in EQ country needs one of these (at least until the GD government steals your water heater, furnace and stove)
Ai contraire, the Pacific Plate is lifting.
Supposedly.
Elizabeth ... I'm coming to see you!!!
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