Posted on 12/30/2004 6:49:56 PM PST by topher
[This is a long list of data from that website at the time of posting to preserve the window -- topher.]
Current Time: Fri, 31 Dec 2004 02:26:20 UTC
Updated as of Fri Dec 31 00:10:28 UTC 2004.
DATE-(UTC)-TIME Latitude Longitude Depth Magnitude Comments
yyyy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss degrees degrees km
2004/12/30 17:58:09 12.26N 92.52E 17.6 5.9 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/30 17:34:44 6.74N 92.89E 27.9 5.5 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/30 15:02:18 9.49N 74.90W 50.5 4.8 NORTHERN COLOMBIA
2004/12/30 13:29:45 38.93N 141.48E 70.7 5.1 NEAR EAST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN
2004/12/30 09:40:59 38.38N 135.44E 361.4 4.6 SEA OF JAPAN
2004/12/30 06:38:20 8.98N 92.31E 35.3 4.9 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/30 04:27:36 5.52N 94.27E 30.8 5.5 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/30 01:43:05 4.22N 94.25E 30 5.1 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/30 01:37:44 37.28N 119.38W 32.9 3.3 CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
2004/12/30 01:04:51 4.23N 94.20E 12.7 5.6 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/29 21:12:59 5.20N 94.71E 25.8 5.7 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/29 19:32:08 16.12N 47.20W 10 4.8 NORTHERN MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
2004/12/29 18:50:20 5.54N 94.35E 38.6 5.6 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/29 17:25:48 38.81N 122.79W 2.5 2.9 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
2004/12/29 13:58:52 38.51N 141.91E 54.8 5 NEAR EAST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN
2004/12/29 13:20:25 28.89N 130.44E 7.7 5.7 RYUKYU ISLANDS, JAPAN
2004/12/29 05:56:50 8.78N 93.22E 30 6.2 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/29 01:50:55 9.08N 93.79E 24.9 6.1 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/29 01:39:41 8.32N 93.18E 30 5.8 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 23:07:53 6.73N 92.99E 30 5.1 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 21:47:26 8.93N 93.74E 9.5 5.5 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 21:07:35 53.28N 173.83W 251.4 5.8 ANDREANOF ISLANDS, ALEUTIAN IS., ALASKA
2004/12/28 20:34:12 37.02N 28.34E 10 4.5 WESTERN TURKEY
2004/12/28 19:55:11 9.42N 93.66E 30 5.4 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 17:11:16 9.92N 93.81E 46.3 5.4 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 14:30:42 4.70N 95.24E 47 5.2 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/28 14:08:43 10.39N 93.02E 30 5.3 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 13:46:03 5.06N 96.16E 30 5.1 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/28 13:06:42 6.68N 93.05E 20.8 5.1 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 11:17:44 4.73N 95.21E 41.1 5.8 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/28 09:30:40 37.25N 138.80E 36 5.1 NEAR WEST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN
2004/12/28 07:47:11 18.04N 120.35E 37.4 4.6 LUZON, PHILIPPINES
2004/12/28 07:20:59 11.38N 92.90E 30 4.9 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 05:36:13 9.51N 93.73E 30 5.4 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 04:36:28 13.88N 93.33E 30 4.8 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 03:20:19 6.81N 92.81E 18.8 5.3 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 02:05:14 13.83N 93.47E 30 4.8 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/28 00:37:53 7.66N 94.16E 37.2 5.4 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 20:36:18 8.98N 93.69E 30 5.4 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 20:10:50 2.92N 95.61E 23.9 5.7 SIMEULUE, INDONESIA
2004/12/27 19:28:52 8.58N 93.66E 30 5.4 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 19:26:57 7.81N 92.13E 35.9 5 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 19:16:09 11.57N 93.09E 30 5.1 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 19:13:19 11.61N 92.53E 26.3 5.6 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 18:24:04 9.29N 93.86E 27.3 4.9 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 18:09:33 2.75N 94.64E 41.6 5 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 17:40:01 5.60N 93.16E 8.6 5.2 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 16:18:10 4.86N 94.25E 30.9 4.8 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 16:08:15 5.79N 93.12E 13.7 4.4 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 15:49:32 7.20N 92.27E 30 4.6 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 15:41:03 10.47N 92.86E 34 4.8 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 15:20:32 10.60N 93.59E 13.9 5.1 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 14:46:46 12.35N 92.50E 19 5.8 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 14:30:31 8.55N 93.86E 15.3 5.2 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 14:20:55 8.27N 93.55E 30 4.8 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 13:34:26 2.74N 95.64E 30 4.7 SIMEULUE, INDONESIA
2004/12/27 12:58:15 7.76N 93.23E 30 4.6 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 11:57:53 8.08N 92.28E 12.6 5.1 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 10:46:47 13.65N 93.07E 23.8 5.3 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 10:46:38 13.66N 93.10E 30 5.1 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 10:36:23 38.75N 122.73W 2.9 4.3 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
2004/12/27 10:05:02 4.78N 95.11E 24.7 5.9 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/27 09:57:52 7.72N 92.67E 8.5 5.6 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 09:39:06 5.36N 94.66E 35 6.1 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/27 08:37:38 6.49N 93.26E 30 5.7 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 08:21:39 5.54N 94.60E 48.1 5.4 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/27 07:47:36 2.68N 94.48E 32.3 5.6 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 06:59:15 3.01N 95.54E 30 5.4 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 05:16:34 14.03N 93.09E 30 4.7 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 05:10:52 6.00N 93.21E 26.4 4.9 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 03:04:38 4.26S 152.68E 64.7 5.2 NEW BRITAIN REGION, P.N.G.
2004/12/27 00:49:28 13.00N 92.43E 18.5 6.1 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/27 00:32:16 5.49N 94.46E 33 6 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/27 00:24:29 4.47N 93.76E 10 5.4 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/27 00:24:01 39.82N 120.79W 5.4 3.4 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
2004/12/26 21:13:44 39.82N 120.79W 5.1 3.8 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
2004/12/26 21:06:51 4.59N 96.37E 45 5.6 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/26 20:50:32 6.36N 126.89E 102.5 5.8 MINDANAO, PHILIPPINES
2004/12/26 19:19:56 2.78N 94.17E 30 6.1 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 19:03:49 4.11N 94.24E 30 5.4 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 18:42:43 13.75N 92.97E 23.5 5.3 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 15:12:22 6.70N 92.99E 19.5 5.5 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 15:06:35 3.66N 94.01E 30 5.9 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 14:48:44 13.63N 92.87E 30 5.7 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 13:56:40 2.77N 94.46E 30 5.9 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 12:11:58 11.54N 92.42E 30 5.5 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 12:09:41 12.23N 92.61E 13.4 5.4 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 11:05:00 13.52N 92.86E 13.1 6.2 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 10:51:20 7.59N 92.33E 30 5.6 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 10:19:28 13.47N 92.78E 5.8 6.3 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 10:18:13 8.97N 93.72E 14.4 5.5 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 09:19:59 8.88N 92.35E 4.5 6.6 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 07:38:27 13.15N 93.02E 30 5.8 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 07:07:12 10.37N 93.73E 30 5.6 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 06:38:39 6.71N 92.94E 37.6 5.5 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 06:22:02 10.67N 92.33E 38.9 5.5 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 04:21:29 6.89N 92.90E 36.9 7.1 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 04:10:12 5.49N 92.92E 34.7 5.4 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 03:56:28 37.96N 118.66W 7.8 3.9 CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
2004/12/26 03:19:15 3.72N 93.82E 30 5.6 OFF THE WEST COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 03:17:52 7.16N 92.85E 30 5.8 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 03:08:44 13.74N 93.07E 30 5.9 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 02:59:14 3.20N 94.34E 30 5.8 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 02:52:01 12.48N 92.57E 30 6 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 02:36:09 12.18N 92.96E 31.2 5.9 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 02:34:52 4.01N 94.15E 30 5.7 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/26 02:22:03 8.83N 92.54E 28 5.9 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 02:15:56 12.35N 92.54E 7.9 5.7 ANDAMAN ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 01:48:49 5.41N 94.46E 32.7 5.8 NORTHERN SUMATRA, INDONESIA
2004/12/26 01:21:21 6.39N 93.39E 30 6.2 NICOBAR ISLANDS, INDIA REGION
2004/12/26 00:58:53 3.32N 95.86E 30 9 OFF W COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA
2004/12/25 23:25:07 1.31N 127.42E 157.8 4.7 HALMAHERA, INDONESIA
2004/12/25 22:48:21 15.14N 92.31W 125.3 4.1 CHIAPAS, MEXICO
2004/12/25 22:25:39 19.10S 167.76E 35.1 5.2 VANUATU REGION
2004/12/25 22:20:46 5.99S 127.64E 347.6 4 BANDA SEA
2004/12/25 20:22:19 34.42N 32.10E 39 4.2 CYPRUS REGION
2004/12/25 18:17:33 6.22S 151.08E 63.5 4.6 NEW BRITAIN REGION, P.N.G.
2004/12/25 17:05:30 40.22S 173.52E 203 COOK STRAIT, NEW ZEALAND
2004/12/25 09:08:36 10.40N 72.57W 9.4 4.4 ZULIA, VENEZUELA
2004/12/24 23:54:49 6.60S 109.25E 277 4.5 JAVA, INDONESIA
2004/12/24 19:36:38 19.21S 167.76E 32.7 5.3 VANUATU REGION
2004/12/24 13:49:56 20.06S 178.84W 600 4.6 FIJI REGION
2004/12/24 13:39:44 20.15S 178.76W 615.5 5.2 FIJI REGION
2004/12/24 13:32:16 20.14S 178.65W 600 4.4 FIJI REGION
2004/12/24 05:31:44 50.12S 161.36E 10 5.4 NORTH OF MACQUARIE ISLAND
First, this is all Southern Hemisphere stuff -- the 9.0 was on one side Australia and North, and the 8.1 [on December 23rd 2004] was on the East side of Australia and South.
The meteorite was an asteriod that supposedly came close to the earth during Full Moon. The Full Moon is known to have an effect on tides.
South of New Zealand was an 8.1 earthquake [12/23/04] that everybody was so concerned about the penquins being hurt by huge chunks of ice falling into the ocean [from Antartica].
There is a possibility that a combination of events somehow played a role -- but I would be second guessing.
But science is in its infancy in some respects.
There was some sort of tsumani in Alaska [years ago] or some huge tidal wave because of alleged hugh chunks of rocks falling into the ocean. The only problem is that recently, scientists did some underwater research in the water and found no trace.
Basically you are talking about astronomy, geology, and physics all interplaying. This is a non-trivial mathematical model just to conceive and build just to take some of the events and put them into play.
You have to build models for the Astro-physics as well as factors in two major oceans -- the Pacific and Indian oceans.
Additionally, it needs to be determined what type of fault and what event happened when the 9.0 happened. This might be difficult just because of the enormous damage and the very deep water involved.
Important data was lost on this event -- no tsunami monitoring in the Indian Ocean to help predict may also mean that trying to figure out some of the factors before hand are just lost data.
But what you could be pointing to is the asteroid playing a factor at the time of the full moon.
This is then complicated by a fairly large earthquake -- 8.1 -- and very shallow quake. This means the New Zealand quake might have generated a tsunami that hit Antartica. The water displaced there might have freely flowed in the huge Pacific ocean but somehow got hung up in the Indian ocean in the ring of fire -- building up pressure on an earthquake fault.
[Note swallow earthquakes are known to generate tsunamis from what I have read].
However, and this is really a big if, a major current of water from Antartica could have flowed North on the other side of Australia, and built up pressure [somehow] in the ring of fire.
There are too many if's and too many variables. You may be totally right, but it would take alot of analysis before someone might be able to prove/disprove what you are alluding to.
Speculation right now is dangerous because it might spread panic. Taking information and saying it means one thing that scares people when there is no proof is irresponsible. And the MSM does this all the time.
What you are saying is possible, it just might take 10 to 20 years to prove -- or alot less.
But after the 9.0 + tsunami, how can you reassure the survivors.
Praying for aftershocks to stop...
December 24, 2004
THE world's biggest earthquake in almost four years has struck 800km off the coast of Tasmania, Australian seismological officials said. Geoscience Australia said the quake, measuring 8.1 on the Richter Scale, hit the Macquarie Rise in the Pacific Ocean at 1.59am (AEDT).
The earthquake, which occurred half-way between Australia and Antarctica, was felt throughout Tasmania, seismologist Cvetan Sinadinovski said.
Penguins escape Massive Earthquake BBC article posted on Freerepublic -- talks about the same earthquake.
Since when do these sciences in actual fact not interplay, except in academe? As for your accusation of being irresponsible, I find it objectionable simply due to the recent history of the area. Yes. It is in the Southern Hemisphere. Very good of you to notice.
You are not irresponsible, but I was trying to be careful with my response to say that jumping to conclusions might scare people [people who are uptight right now]. And the MSM is really the ones that should avoid reporting anything along the lines of what you are saying -- this should be reported in a scientific journal -- after studies made.
Too many people may not understand the science. For example, what I heard elsewhere was the asteroid was directly on the opposite side of the earth when this occurred but I cannot put my fingers on a hard link of evidence that this is true.
I was trying not to scare people. You were going about this very scientific, but we, and I do include myself, must be careful what we post.
And the last people I want to report about this is the MSM. Some of their reporting is really bad right now -- a natural gas mud field has turned into an erupting volcano by a French News Service [AFP].
Times of India had an article about this. Basically, there is no tsunami warning system in the Indian Ocean. Hawaii has a Pacific tsunami warning system.
You would need measuring points in various places that are not set up at the moment.
Diego Garcia could be a measuring point, along with a number of places in the Islands that India has, Sri Lanka, the coast of India, the Indian Ocean side of Indonesia.
India has had two tsunamis in the 20th century and no this one in the 21st century. But there was no interest when scientists tried to get a system in place before this tsunami by the government of India.
I simply never feel a 4.0 although many do. I sometimes even miss the 5.0s ... but then I'm a Los Angeles native.
I was astonished today to read in some news source that 90% of the tsunamis are in the Pacific! No wonder they were less inclined to think one was forming.
Thank you for posting the info about Dodge. I read specifically that Diego Garcia had no problems with the tsunami.
Agreed that the MSM is not a viable source for linking the dots. I would have thought that after the 9.2 in Alaska, although there was no major loss of life due to the sparce population, there would have been more effort than a warning system as a result. Of course, NOAA was remapping the ocean floor there into the 80s.
I hope that this event produces more than that warning system's overdue completion. To think that some of these folks could have been asleep on the beach or in their beds because they had no warning is truly shameful.
Some tsunamis are very local -- Japan, Alaska, Islands like Hawaii, etc.
The volcano Krakatoa erupted [blew up is the correct word] in 1883. The tsunami generated reached San Francisco -- although it was only 0.1 meters high.
But when Krakatoa went off in the same general area, the explosion was so loud that the Island of Diego Garcia, over 2000 miles away, the people thought a ship was firing its cannons because it was in distress. Sort of like something happening in Houston, Texas or New Orleans, LA and being heard in Los Angeles -- though the open sea conducts sound much better than land masses such as the Rocky Mountains.
The Times of India said one reason a warning system was not in place is that with India's huge population [over 1 billion people], losing a few people to such an event was acceptable.
But the energy is a factor of 32 with each magnitude. So the a 9.0 generates 1024 times more energy than a 7.0 -- which makes alot of California quakes seem alot smaller.
Only point to post is make people alert in that area.
Right now, the aftershocks are terrifying people who have survived the tsunami.
1. Giant Iceberg breaks away from Antartica. Iceberg is so big it could supply Nile River valley for 80 years.
2. 8.1 Earthquake South of New Zealand/Australia
3. Full Moon/Asteroid event -- I don't know much about this except Full Moon is supposed to affect tides.
4. Magnitude 9.0 Earthquake -- very shallow and apparently the right type of quake to generate number 5.
5. Tsunami of December 26, 2004 -- a natural disaster that will make the hurricanes of the Gulf of Mexico of 2004 pale by comparison.
The billion dollar question(s) is: would the elimination/changes in any of 1-3 change 4 & 5. Is there an event #6 yet to come -- volcano eruption/earthquake -- caused by numbers 1-5.
I am also alluding to how difficult to try to program a model for all of this. In a sense, the huge, melting iceberg would have [1] displaced water when it broke away and [2] started melting.
How much water was displaced by #2 and #3.
The key to the above is that the East Indies have a number of Islands/straits that restrict water movement from Pacific to Indian Oceans and vice-a-versa.
Friction would play into this -- i.e., the water in the Pacific is allowed to flow freely into the Pacific because of the huge opening nearing 1 & 2, but cause friction/displacements with Indian Ocean.
That could conceivably cause pressure to build up somehow [water or plate pressure] to cause #4.
Finally, with the huge displacement of water, are all events now ended by this series of events?
Very good outline of events. Good job.
We know you're not kidding - that's why they call them environmental wacko's.
I heard one call into Rush's show last week suggesting that building all those highways & cutting those channels into the earth could possibly cause the ground to split way down deep. I think the guy was rolling his own if you know what I mean.
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