Posted on 12/02/2004 11:09:41 PM PST by sonsofliberty2000
Damn it Squantos! You're making me blush!
LOL...Just teasin ya ......:o)
Hope yer well.......Stay safe !
Sexual Harassment!!!!!
< /bad Squantos >
It's the BIG one in VA, Sweetie.
Wonder if the track is O.K.
Oh...wait... Richmond, VA, not CA...
Never mind
(2.2...pfft... dat's nuthin' for this lifelong Californian)
Just an honest question my friend......:o)
Just messin' with Ya
Get them tickets yet?
Gotta hit the rack here soon got a double to do later today, second in 3 days but the OT will be nice.
Watch out for them Wigets;)
Sorry 0 forgot the PLACE - St Louis!
OTOH, one of Mrs Heatseeker's 25-pound cats just jumped off a table...
I thought there was some shakin' going on at the Heatseeker house but didn't think it had anything to do with the cat.
Oh, all right, go ahead and enjoy it - just be sure to stand under a doorway...
Heatseeker now hurriedly prepares to enter the federal witness protection program for having said that, since the Mrs also lurks here.
Breaking news? Come on.
Big truck drives by house, windows rattle is more serious.
Was one of those quakes the one that changed the course of part of the Mississippi River? I think that was centered somewhere near St Louis. The quake was supposed to be huge. I know there is lots of speculation about when the "big one" hits California but I have always worried about the possibility of another big earthquake in the Midwest (you have the added problem of what the quake might do to the Mississippi River).
2.2 and this is breaking news?
http://hsv.com/genlintr/newmadrd/
http://209.157.64.200/focus/f-news/965173/posts
The New Madris fault line has been the scene of some pretty big earthquakes. Certainly not the frequency of California and Alaska but none the less it happens. This one in Va could be a preview of coming attractions.
If I remember my history, there were a series of earthquakes during the winter of 1811-12 involving the New Madrid fault, in southern Missouri. They were huge, and did involve changing the course of the Mississippi River, which for a time flowed backward in at least one location.
The New Madrid fault still exists, and there are earthquakes in MO to this day. Not as many as in California, though.
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