There was a 3.0 yesterday in AR.
To: Keith in Iowa
Oh, no. Does this mean Mississippi State scored on the Razorbacks?
2 posted on
11/20/2010 12:01:53 PM PST by
FourPeas
(Pester not the geek, for the electrons are his friends.)
To: Keith in Iowa
The ground in Guy, AR moves so often they need seat belts on the toilets.
3 posted on
11/20/2010 12:02:04 PM PST by
NeverForgetBataan
(To the German Commander: ..........................NUTS !)
To: Keith in Iowa
Lots of activity in that area during recent months.
4 posted on
11/20/2010 12:04:44 PM PST by
KoRn
(Department of Homeland Security, Certified - "Right Wing Extremist")
To: Keith in Iowa
New Madrid acting up again.
6 posted on
11/20/2010 12:04:58 PM PST by
Mr. Mojo
To: Keith in Iowa; navysealdad; Ernest_at_the_Beach; calljack; lainie; BurbankKarl; pollywog; ...
Earthquake Ping List.
If you wish to be removed from the Earthquake Ping List or added to it, please FReepmail me.
Anna. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 1996. 24:339-84
The Enigma of the New Madrid Earthquakes of 1811-1812
Arch C. Johnston
Center for Earthquake Research and Information (CERI), The University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee 38152
Eugene S. Schweig
United States Geological Survey and CERI, The University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee 38152
ABSTRACT
Continental North America's greatest earthquake sequence struck on the western frontier of the United States. The frontier was not then California but the valley of the continent's greatest river, the Mississippi, and the sequence was the New Madrid earthquakes of the winter of 1811-1812.
Their described impacts on the land and the river were so dramatic as to produce widespread modem disbelief. However, geological, geophysical, and historical research, carried out mostly in the past two decades, has verified much in the historical accounts. The sequence included at least six (possibly nine) events of estimated moment magnitude M . 7 and two of M @ 8.
The faulting was in the intruded crust of a failed intracontinental rift, beneath the saturated alluvium of the river valley, and its violent shaking resulted in massive and extensive liquefaction. The largest earthquakes ruptured at least six (and possibly more than seven) intersecting fault segments, one of which broke the surface as a thrust fault that disrupted the bed of the Mississippi River in at least 2 (and possibly four) places...
The Enigma of the New Madrid Earthquakes of 1811-1812
12 posted on
11/20/2010 12:22:04 PM PST by
bd476
To: Quix; The Comedian
To: Keith in Iowa
Series of earthquakes shake Arkansas
Associated Press - November 20, 2010 8:54 PM ET
GUY, Ark. (AP) - A series of earthquakes, including one with a magnitude of 3.9, has rattled parts of central Arkansas.
http://www.wxvt.com/Global/story.asp?S=13543386
23 posted on
11/20/2010 7:48:05 PM PST by
John W
(Natural-born US citizen since 1955)
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