Posted on 01/21/2010 7:00:54 PM PST by LucyJo
Scientists predict a Haiti-magnitude earthquake along the New Madrid fault during the next 50 years. The fault runs under the Mississippi Delta, one of the poorest parts of the US.
(Excerpt) Read more at csmonitor.com ...
Wal-Mart inherited the tornados.
I did not feel safe. A tornado is like thunder, if you are in range you can be hit so fast you won't believe it.
Perhaps when the PTB are collecting stats on your visitors from their little hidden bots.
You will sink in over your head. Sand wells will spout sand. Bon Ami wells will spout Bon Ami (powdered feldspar).
Worse, the ancient volcano under Chestnut Ridge might spring to life.
Yup, volcanoes in the region only you don't usually see them ~ but the feldspar deposit in Jennings County was puffed out the volcano in Jackson County.
There are still HOT SPRINGS active around the perimeter. Some of the earliest permanent settlements in the area were made ON TOP OF the hotsprings. That was about 14,000 years back. Vast deposits of Clovis points in the neighborhood, with a number of them covered over with major deposits of Early Woodland Culture points.
Think about what was heating up the rock to turn it into flint around there.
Then, there's the Ohio River ~ it has flooded that far North, on top of all the other floods.
So, here's your dangers:
A. Earthquake
B. Flood
C. Hurricane (yup, them too)
D. Tornado
E. Blizzards
F. Glaciers return
G. Volcano
H. More stuff
There are few other places on Earth more at risk than Amaroogia (as we call it) ~ there and the Ten Acres!
I've seen more house trailers mounted on pontoons in this part of the country than everywhere else. Many people are aware of the risk and have taken appropriate action.
Bridges are another matter ~ a piece of history is in order. Way back when Hurricane Hazel decided to rain on Indiana for a month almost all the culverts in Marion County Indiana washed out. That was the primary bridging method in those days, and, if you look closely, it is still the primary bridging method ~ and not just there but all over the Midwest.
Citizen militia could probably do manual labor and replace enough culverts with D-handle shovels and strong backs to have traffic up and running in days.
In the meantime it is probably wise to purchase a hand operated pump for a well, and to get a well drilled if you haven't done so, or haven't used it in many years.
Every now and then a web server is just too busy to respond and the resulting error message doesn’t fit the situation. Usually nothing to worry about.
i’m not that close to seymor or columbus. i am sort of between bloomington and french lick.
Sure, it was more active a hundred million years ago, but think about how close you are to that big crack in the Earth called the Wabash, and how close the Carmel Fault is to that part of the country.
Last little quake on that fault (about 5 years back) knocked cracks into stone structures throughout Monroe county.
When the mantle oozes and cracks form, a certain type of volcano can work its way to the top through old vents ~ really ancient vents too!
There's a volcano East of the Hills of Brown County and West of the HIlls of Brown County. They're old but they are still chugging!
Yes, I had heard that. I wouldn't want to have been around to see it. Don't even want to think about having been in a boat on the Mississip when it hit!
Danke.
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