Posted on 11/07/2004 2:25:19 PM PST by djf
Well, folks, many come here and over and over deny there is no linkage between volcano events.
1.3 2004/11/07 11:43:57 46.840N 121.758W 1.4 1 km ( 1 mi) S of Mount Rainier
1.2 2004/11/07 11:27:24 46.844N 121.769W 0.6 1 km ( 1 mi) SSW of Mount Rainier
3.2 2004/11/07 11:23:59 46.843N 121.756W 1.6 1 km ( 1 mi) SSE of Mount Rainier
1.5 2004/11/07 11:12:25 46.843N 121.759W 1.4 1 km ( 1 mi) S of Mount Rainier
1.5 2004/11/07 10:03:55 46.841N 121.751W 1.7 2 km ( 1 mi) SSE of Mount Rainier
1.2 2004/11/06 23:58:36 47.342N 122.829W 44.6 29 km (18 mi) SSW of Bremerton, WA
1.1 2004/11/06 02:49:29 46.358N 122.251W 10.2 18 km (11 mi) NNW of Mount St. Helens
1.2 2004/11/06 01:01:50 46.845N 121.761W 0.0 1 km ( 1 mi) S of Mount Rainier
Six quakes there since yesterday, the biggest a 3.2, all occurring inside the mountain at a depth of 1-1.5 KM, seismic activity as reflected above at the Longmire station VERY VERY similar to what happened on St. Helens in the months preceding the eruption.
Sleep tight! Don't let the bedbugs bite!
Downwind of the cap cloud, the lenticular or wave clouds sometimes extend well over eastern Washington state, with a successively smaller cloud at each crest in the airflow. We can occasionally see clouds from different Cascade peaks simultaneously, at different altitudes and directions. Rattlesnake mountain, at 3,500 feet, frequently adds its own lower-altitude wave and rotor clouds.
Neat!
Oh man, you take away all my fun.
LOL I usually step lightly, but we need to shake loose those last few crucial votes for Dino Rossi! ;)
Funny
Good evening there, BearWash! What side of the mountain are you on?
And the soil I'm sitting on, on the shores of Puget Sound, was deposited there by that mountain in millenia past. If Mt. Rainier goes, my oh my, there's going to be some very serious loss of life around here.
That's interesting because the weather forcast is for rain on Tuesday. Did you see the article in the paper last week about Rainier specifically that the glacier on Rainier is equal to 1 cubic mile? That's a lot of flow to melt if it happens.
Take your pick or my choice: all three...
Being a lifetime resident I have heard of that before and yes, it generally does rain, but this cloud formation was not directly over Mt. Rainier, at least not when I saw it The clouds are interesting though and pretty.
Excuse Me . . .
I'm not sure I understand your post, but the name rings a bell...
For those of us "within range", here are some good ideas from secretsofsurvival.com:
Thanks! I already have most of these covered.
DON'T DRIVE YOUR VEHICLE!
Geologists are saying this is not in any way related to St. Helens.
Nothing happening here, folks. Go back to sleep.
Then, in their very next breath, they say this was the largest event on Mt. Rainier in the last 30+ years or so.
MSNBC latest article:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6447248/
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