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Earthquake in Midwest
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| DocCincy
Posted on 06/18/2002 10:57:37 AM PDT by DocCincy
Earthquake in Midwest....
TOPICS: Breaking News; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: earthquake; midwest; ohio
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To: Atsilvquodi
Obviously a manmade disaster, too many fat people. How much more proof is required before we enact a tax on fatty foods and increase govt funding of population controls?
(Handpicked) scientist project that in 20 years there will be so many fat people that the combined shaking will cause oceans to rise, inundating most of our coastal cities.
To: dennis1x
2 quakes...1 a 4.4, another a 5.0 rumble
It's going to be unclear what exactly happened for quite some time, and a precise magnitude measurement may actually take months.
I've seen this happen with other quakes on FR.
People are under the impression there's ONE magnitude scale and that a few seconds after an earthquake there's one simple accurate measurement and that's the magnitude.
There are actually SEVERAL different magnitude scales, some are more accurate or less accurate based on the size of the quake, and quakes will typically be a different magnitude on each scale.
What you see on the internet quickly after a quake is an AUTOMATED solution by a computer connected to a seismic network; these often are quite wrong, will report one quake as several quakes or several quakes as one quake, get the magnitude and/or location wrong, etc. Compounded when you don't have a dense seismometer network..and the Midwest doesn't have the network California does, though the immediate New Madrid area does.
So you'll see magnitudes of quakes constantly changing as humans review the data, etc. One problem the media has in big third world quakes is immediately using the number provided by the local country which often is far too low, and they never revise the number.
42
posted on
06/18/2002 11:16:50 AM PDT
by
John H K
To: Conservobabe
Nothing at the Big Lake, either.
To: Born in a Rage
A couple of months ago I got to feel the northeast earthquake. Something seismic is going on that's for sure.
Of course; the continued movement of the North American plate westward, building up stress, which it's been doing for millions of years. This stress is released in earthquakes of varying magnitudes.
There's nothing EXTREMELY unusual about the Northeast earthquake or this recent earthquake; taking a big picture view, they're decidedly normal. And not necessarily a precursor of anything.
44
posted on
06/18/2002 11:19:02 AM PDT
by
John H K
To: dennis1x
2 quakes...1 a 4.4, another a 5.0 rumble.Damn. A 5.0 is a lot more potentially dangerous than people think, outside of areas with hardcore earthquake-proof-building regulations like SF and LA. In Manhattan, a 5.0 could cause some very serious damage and a lot of deaths because so many of the buildings are unreinforced brick masonry. The skyscrapers would be okay, but your brownstone wouldn't be very pleasant afterwards.
(And just to give Manhattanites a little something extra to worry about, there are actually major fault lines running right under Union Square and 125th St. The Big One will hit NYC one day, too, just like in SF and LA. Except we're not the least bit prepared in NY.)
45
posted on
06/18/2002 11:20:05 AM PDT
by
Timesink
To: DocCincy
I felt it here in Southern Illinois (about 100 miles south of St. Louis)... It knocked some stuff off a shelf in my home. It was pretty strong! It scared the crap out of me! Last night the lights were flickering and wonder if that had something to do with early earthquake activity.
To: DocCincy
I'm on the USGS email list. The number of quakes above 5.0 in the last 24-48 hours has been enormously above usual--even above "usual" recent "swarms."
I don't know what it means. But it's not remotely usual. And they seem to be all around the Pacific Rim except for the midwest one.
The plates up near the Oregon, California border give me a real uneasy feeling as I look at the plate maps.
Any other FREEPERS have any feelings, thoughts, dreams about such?
47
posted on
06/18/2002 11:20:55 AM PDT
by
Quix
To: A Citizen Reporter
I lived in STL until the end of 1991 - remember the big one we were supposed to get around then? Some expert even predicted the exact date (can't remember if it was in 1990 or 1991). Needless to say, it didn't happen. It was like a Y2K precursor - people had their cars loaded with provisions in case they had to evacuate.
To: DocCincy
Here is the link to the St. Louis seismic station.
49
posted on
06/18/2002 11:21:13 AM PDT
by
Lokibob
To: Dog
Thanks, but it wasn't listed when I posted the link.
CD
To: RGF
I don't think I'd notice anything less than a 5.0 simply 'cause I've always ogt them snot-nosed kids goin' by my house in their buzz-bomb Hondas with the subwoofers cranked up.
boombaboombabubbaboomba...
To: Diddle E. Squat
LMAO!
To: DocCincy
Didn't feel anything here at ND
53
posted on
06/18/2002 11:23:43 AM PDT
by
fuente
To: Ford Fairlane
Hey Ford, Im in Mt Zion......btw I didn't feel it.
To: DocCincy
The little lady said she felt something last night. Last time that happened was about 150 years ago too!
To: DocCincy
I'm in Milford, and didn't feel it.
56
posted on
06/18/2002 11:24:46 AM PDT
by
muggs
To: DocCincy
Fox News reports a 5.5 in Indiana... that the one I felt here in Southern Illinois.
To: mountaineer
Yes, it was about that time of the "big scare" that got national attention because a professor here in Cape Girardeau predicted the exact date of a devasting earthquake. Well, we did get two earthquakes here that were scary as hell. He got fired because it was not as big as predicted. LOL
To: DocCincy
59
posted on
06/18/2002 11:27:50 AM PDT
by
Lokibob
To: A Citizen Reporter
I'm in St. Louis, and I felt it. Dittos! For about five seconds. Weird.
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