Posted on 12/25/2004 5:46:26 PM PST by bd476
A great earthquake occurred at 00:58:55 (UTC) on Sunday, December 26, 2004. The magnitude 8.1 event has been located OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA. (This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.)
|
|
|
|
Location Maps:
Did you feel it? Historical Moment Tensor Solutions Theoretical P-Wave Travel Times |
|
|
Thanks Capitan. That's a very large area with very large earthquake potential. Kinda reminds me of the San Andreas fault, only bigger.
LOL, mind reader.
About twice as big.
I suspect we won't know the actual measurements of seafloor displacement for a while. The area will have to be surveyed and compared to earlier survey records.
There are reports of 100-foot (lateral?) displacement on the island of Sumatra - but I discount those as fantastic until I see the evidence. It is easy enough for a geodetic marker to get caught up in a landslide.
I totally understand now, I have an excercise/lap pool that I often displace water out onto the floor by the waves I make.
The waves end up bowling around the curved edges and lap over onto the floor in the shallow/step area.
Interesting.
In the last big quake I was in, in Taiwan--I think the big one that caused the deaths . . .
Taiwan got 3 meters narrower and 1 meter taller.
It seems to me that we have satellites that could tell us virtually instantly what the differences were. Perhaps it would take some fancy calculations and perhaps it's a straightforward measurement. I don't know that much about our capabilities.
One thing these movies had right was that a asteroid impact in the ocean could cause a gigantic tsunami, unlike anything caused by an earthquake or volcano. There was a sci-fi book written a couple of decades ago called "Lucifer's Hammer" (I can't remember the author off the top of my head). There was a scene in the book about surfers in Santa Monica Bay attempting to ride a tsunami. It's sort of funny when you think about it.
I also noticed the last couple of months if you hit on a story near the top of the page of on the earthquake page you hit the first choice you automtically get redirected to the ad above on each particular page then you have to back browse and rehit the info you want.
Annoying but also dishonest on clicking on ads.
Perhaps paranoia . . .
but contemplating moving back to Taipei . . . eagerly . . . and the prediction that there will be an 8.X in Taipei . . .
Have been wondering what kind of 4 X 4 structure I could arrange around and over my bed for safety! LOL. Concrete multi-story apt building steel frame is the rule.
She was explaining that the earthquake occurred on a thrust fault zone. She also mentioned that in comparison, this quake lasted perhaps 3-4 minutes whereas the 1994 Northridge quake lasted 10-15 seconds.
The Northridge quake seemed more like 2 minutes to me. Of course I was hanging on to my bed for dear life so that I wouldn't be shaken off of it.
"Telling signs" I saw a day or two before the 1994 quake were two large runaway and deceased dogs on the Ventura Freeway where I had never seen runaway dead animals before.
My cat was trying to dig a hole to China in the litter box about one hour prior to another large quake. Quite startling. She'd empty the entire box of the clean litter, I'd dash out, sweep it up and place it back in the litter box, and then she'd start all over scratching and pushing it out again and again.
Then I heard a very deep moaning sound, and I thought she was getting ready to throw up a large fur ball or that perhaps she had found a mouse or something. Then kapow, crash bang and she hissed and screamed and I thought someone had broken in. Then came relief upon the realization that it was "just a quake."
"And then he has the [knots] to brag about how many 'hits' his site gets! Sheer balls, he's got!"
Actually, reloads don't count, only individual daily page views from different IP addresses.
LOL, gotta hand it to you for your candor. Either that or you are a terrific swimmer! :) But it's a great example.
Ping.
The farther away you are from the epicenter of the earthquake, the longer it lasts (but the lesser the intensity of shaking) - as a rule of thumb. This is beacuse the wave-train "spreads outs" away from the hypocenter.
the 1857 Fort Tejon quake (the model of the "big one" for southern California) reportedly shook for about three minutes. Professor Kerry Sieh at Cal Tech collected first-person accounts of that earthquake while doing some of his great work on the San Andreas Fault. Ealy in my career, I was lucky enought to be be on a couple of his seminar/field trips.
It is well-recognized that animals are sensitive to slight earthquake temors. In fact, P-waves are the same as sound waves and are just barely in the audible range of humans. Animals may sense, or hear, some P-wave arrivals we don't recognize.
9.0
13,000 dead
:O..
Any seismologists out there?
There's a bunch more at the link below:
http://aslwww.cr.usgs.gov/Seismic_Data/heli2.shtml
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Beijing, China
Ankara, Turkey
Taiwan is part of that seismic zone, just like southern California - where I am located. Of course, there is no place totally immune to some sort of natural disaster. Just pick your poison!
The travel times are computed using the spherically-symmetric IASP91 reference earth velocity model. The heavy black lines shown are the approximate distances to the P-wave shadow zone (103 to 140 degrees)."
City | Distance (degrees) |
Travel Time (min:secs) |
Arrival Time UTC |
Phase |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kathmandu, Nepal | 26.24 | 5:35.1 | 1:04:25.1 | P |
Beijing, China | 40.97 | 7:42.8 | 1:06:32.8 | P |
Agana, Guam | 49.40 | 8:49.7 | 1:07:39.7 | P |
Tokyo, Japan | 51.81 | 9:07.9 | 1:07:57.9 | P |
Nairobi, Kenya | 59.10 | 10:00.4 | 1:08:50.4 | P |
Brisbane, Australia | 63.01 | 10:27.0 | 1:09:17.0 | P |
Moscow, Russia | 69.78 | 11:10.4 | 1:10:00.4 | P |
Rome, Italy | 82.80 | 12:24.4 | 1:11:14.4 | P |
Wellington, New Zealand | 83.92 | 12:30.1 | 1:11:20.1 | P |
Bergen, Norway | 87.38 | 12:47.3 | 1:11:37.3 | P |
London, England | 91.15 | 13:05.0 | 1:11:55.0 | P |
Anchorage, Alaska | 98.57 | 13:38.7 | 1:12:28.7 | Pdiff |
Honolulu, Hawaii | 104.00 | 14:02.9 | 1:12:52.9 | Pdiff |
Palmer Station, Antarctica | 114.17 | 14:48.0 | 1:13:38.0 | Pdiff |
Seattle, Washington | 119.18 | 15:10.2 | 1:14:00.2 | Pdiff |
San Francisco, California | 125.94 | 15:40.2 | 1:14:30.2 | Pdiff |
Duluth, Minnesota | 129.68 | 15:56.8 | 1:14:46.8 | Pdiff |
Bangor, Maine | 130.17 | 15:59.0 | 1:14:49.0 | Pdiff |
Ottawa, Canada | 130.91 | 16:02.3 | 1:14:52.3 | Pdiff |
Los Angeles, California | 130.93 | 16:02.4 | 1:14:52.4 | Pdiff |
Golden, Colorado | 133.02 | 16:11.7 | 1:15:01.7 | Pdiff |
Boston, Massachusetts | 133.05 | 16:11.8 | 1:15:01.8 | Pdiff |
New York, New York | 135.22 | 16:21.4 | 1:15:11.4 | Pdiff |
Philadephia, Pennsylvania | 136.17 | 16:25.6 | 1:15:15.6 | Pdiff |
Albuquerque, New Mexico | 136.41 | 16:26.7 | 1:15:16.7 | Pdiff |
Wichita, Kansas | 137.37 | 16:31.0 | 1:15:21.0 | Pdiff |
Washington, D.C. | 137.50 | 16:31.5 | 1:15:21.5 | Pdiff |
St. Louis, Missouri | 137.88 | 16:33.2 | 1:15:23.2 | Pdiff |
Knoxville, Tennessee | 140.95 | 16:46.9 | 1:15:36.9 | Pdiff |
Brownsville, Texas | 148.25 | 19:42.3 | 1:18:32.3 | PKPdf |
Miami, Florida | 150.85 | 19:46.4 | 1:18:36.4 | PKPdf |
San Juan, Puerto Rico | 151.97 | 19:48.1 | 1:18:38.1 | PKPdf |
Mexico City, Mexico | 153.07 | 19:49.7 | 1:18:39.7 | PKPdf |
Lima, Peru | 168.74 | 20:06.6 | 1:18:56.6 | PKPdf |
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.