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Haiti Earthquake Disaster Little Surprise to Some Seismologists
Scientific American ^
| 1/13/2010
| Katherine Harmon
Posted on 01/17/2010 2:37:31 AM PST by ErnstStavroBlofeld
click here to read article
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2
posted on
01/17/2010 2:53:38 AM PST
by
ErnstStavroBlofeld
("I have learned to use the word "impossible" with the greatest caution."-Dr.Werner Von Braun)
To: sonofstrangelove
3
posted on
01/17/2010 3:01:28 AM PST
by
SunnyUsa
(I'm not one of those "who are we to judge?" people)
To: SunnyUsa
Not really.
If you had interviewed 100 seismologists, odds are very hign that one of them might mention this area.
But it’s been quiet for along time.
And if the quake had happened twenty miles further west, it would be a blip on the map and very few would have even paid attention.
This was Haiti’s version of 1906 San Francisco.
4
posted on
01/17/2010 3:14:34 AM PST
by
djf
(2010 in review: A handfull of Wall Street banks got way more help than Haiti!!!)
To: sonofstrangelove
Nah, it's not due to tectonic movements. I've heard that it's divine in origin, with some global warming thrown in. /sarcasm.
Seriously though, I wonder what other faults (apart from the obvious one in SF) have also been slowly building up pressure?
5
posted on
01/17/2010 3:37:15 AM PST
by
spetznaz
(Nuclear-tipped Ballistic Missiles: The Ultimate Phallic Symbol)
To: spetznaz
"Seriously though, I wonder what other faults (apart from the obvious one in SF) have also been slowly building up pressure?" New Madrid
6
posted on
01/17/2010 3:43:48 AM PST
by
DocRock
(All they that TAKE the sword shall perish with the sword. Matthew 26:52 Gun grabbers beware.)
To: spetznaz
7
posted on
01/17/2010 3:44:08 AM PST
by
mathluv
( Conservative first and foremost, republican second - GO SARAHCUDA!!!!)
To: DocRock
8
posted on
01/17/2010 3:49:33 AM PST
by
mathluv
( Conservative first and foremost, republican second - GO SARAHCUDA!!!!)
To: mathluv
Thanks, nice link. It’s bookmarked for study after church this AM. I used to live in western KY and still have extended family in the area. I worry constantly about this fault. It’s been 199 years since the last big one.
9
posted on
01/17/2010 3:56:31 AM PST
by
DocRock
(All they that TAKE the sword shall perish with the sword. Matthew 26:52 Gun grabbers beware.)
To: DocRock
I live in NE TX. I always have been under the impression that we could be affected, too, but not on those maps.
10
posted on
01/17/2010 3:58:47 AM PST
by
mathluv
( Conservative first and foremost, republican second - GO SARAHCUDA!!!!)
To: spetznaz
“I wonder what other faults (apart from the obvious one in SF) have also been slowly building up pressure?”
Tehran, in the same SA article. Turkey, Pakistan, as well as California..
11
posted on
01/17/2010 4:32:15 AM PST
by
RoadTest
(The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple. Ps. 119:130)
To: DocRock
New Madrid. It’s famous. It rang church bells in the Northeast and was felt along the St. Laurence River.
12
posted on
01/17/2010 4:34:23 AM PST
by
RoadTest
(The entrance of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple. Ps. 119:130)
To: sonofstrangelove
You’d think they could have spent at least a little of that $3 Billion on some re-bar.......
13
posted on
01/17/2010 4:42:13 AM PST
by
Feckless
(Don't care where he was born. The oath I took said "...against all enemies, foreign and domestic".)
To: DocRock
Thanks, nice link. Its bookmarked for study after church this AM. I used to live in western KY and still have extended family in the area. I worry constantly about this fault. Its been 199 years since the last big one. So tell me just what has your worry accomplished so far? Do you think there is anything you can do to prevent it? What you need to do, instead of worrying, is to be ready for an EQ, have emergency rations stored(including water), clothing, make sure your dwelling is up to EQ code, at least at best as possible. Once these things are done(which they should be by most people for any type of disaster)then worry is just non-productive and useless.
14
posted on
01/17/2010 5:00:37 AM PST
by
calex59
To: mathluv
15
posted on
01/17/2010 5:09:34 AM PST
by
SueRae
To: sonofstrangelove
where many areas are either unsafely built due to corruption or poverty. More like poverty due to corruption.
16
posted on
01/17/2010 5:18:23 AM PST
by
dirtboy
To: sonofstrangelove
"The fault has been more or less locked for 200 years," British Geological Survey seismologist Roger Musson explained to TIME. In this area, where the Caribbean plate is moving east against the North American Plate, plate movement is about seven millimeters per year, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said.
No!
It's global warming! I know it's global warming that caused it, because Danny Glover said so!
Actually, there are LOTS of faults running throughout many countries, and though the quakes and volcanic activities are very few and far between, just one is enough to ruin your whole day. A really good example is for those people (like myself) in the midwest. The New Madrid fault is centered near the boot heel of MO, and when it goes, promises to be a real doosie. The last time there was a major quake from those faults (actually a few quakes in 1811 and 1812), it's estimated that they were of magnitude 8 or more. The last major quake there (5.4 in 1968) effected 23 states and was felt as far away as Boston.
Mark
17
posted on
01/17/2010 5:37:48 AM PST
by
MarkL
(Do I really look like a guy with a plan?)
To: djf
If you had interviewed 100 seismologists, odds are very hign that one of them might mention this area.But its been quiet for along time.
For some reason, people just don't want to believe what seismologists say. Probably because "geological time" doesn't sync very well with a typical person's "what am I doing this week" sort of planning. And the fact that they simply can't reliably predict what's going to happen, either with quakes or volcanic activity (though that's easier). For example, I recently saw an article that flat out stated that Mt Vesuvius may be beginning another eruption cycle soon. (a lot of people don't realize that the Mediterranean is one of the most active volcanic regions in the world)
Mark
18
posted on
01/17/2010 5:46:49 AM PST
by
MarkL
(Do I really look like a guy with a plan?)
To: DocRock
A big New Madrid quake would be a game changer. It would make Katrina seem like a one afternoon kindergarten picnic.
19
posted on
01/17/2010 6:11:26 AM PST
by
Travis McGee
(---www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com---)
To: MarkL
For example, I recently saw an article that flat out stated that Mt Vesuvius may be beginning another eruption cycle soon. (a lot of people don't realize that the Mediterranean is one of the most active volcanic regions in the world)
The last time Vesuvius let go was back in 1944. Here is what happened to American warplanes based near the volcano. I've also seen pictures of American soldiers in close proximity to hot lava flows engulfing Italian buildings.
20
posted on
01/17/2010 6:23:31 AM PST
by
Cheburashka
(It's a _happy_ Russian novel. Everybody still dies, but everybody dies happy.)
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