Is This The Big One? 151
Quivering Coward writes "There has been a marked increase in seismic activity in
southern California in the past several days," pointing to this map from Caltech Earthquake
Net, including a 5.2 and 3.6 this morning (2004/06/15).
"Could this be the big one? Is 'the big one' ever going to happen?
NASA is
doing their part to predict the future of Earthquakes."
Run (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Run (Score:5, Interesting)
You might have a day or two left but well the Lunar Land tides maxed on June 3 and they do it again on July 1. The orbital max differential occurred on June 15 for apogee and will max for Paragee on July 1. I suppose with all the other data we see a high probablility of Earthquake as the moon approaches the close approach on July 1.
The time to be concerned is when the moon is at 45 Deg to the longitude of So. CA.
Click on the Earth Moon Viewer Apogee/Paragee Calc [fourmilab.ch] if you want to check out the exact times etc.
Re:Run (Score:2)
Re:Run (Score:2)
Relax. Slashdot is an international forum with lots of non-English speakers. He (and I) may have guessed what was meant, but you can never be sure if you guessed right or really know how to spell it yourself, if the writer made a typo or didn't actually know how to write it, or if writer actual
Re:Run (Score:4, Funny)
"Nitpick" is one word. "Paragee" is a two-letter misspelling of "perigee", although "mispelling" is a one-letter misspelling of "misspelling".
Oh, and it's "insignificant", not "insignifigant".
I had to be so careful not to make any typos in this post! ;-)
tides do *not* cause or affect earthquakes (Score:2)
Note that there is NO empirical correlation between either the intensity of lunar tides and earthquakes nor the phase of the lunar tide and earthquakes. Exhaustive scans through 50 years of data show total non-correlation.
It is possible that we may someday discover something that will allow that affects or causes earthquakes, and that we might therefore be able to predict them. However, the answer is not lunar tides, despite the num
What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyway. A couple of small quakes and
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:5, Funny)
Of course, this only matters if you actually consider west California "civilization". For me this is all strictly academic.
=Smidge=
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:2)
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:1)
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:4, Funny)
Southern Cali == world?? You must be American.
Apart from Californians themselves, I wonder for how many Americans this will literally be the end of the world as they actually die from depression when the output of mindless TV shows and movies slows down to a trickle.
-hadohk
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:2)
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What happens when I click on an earthquake? (Score:2)
Why, a quake goes off, of course. (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh, come ON. NONE of you have ever wondered why the moon only shows us one face? What're the odds?
Not yet available for Q3.
Re:Why, a quake goes off, of course. (Score:4, Informative)
The moon is gravitationally locked [starryskies.com] to the Earth's rotation. Tidal forces from Earth's gravitational field have induced a bulge in the moon; this buldge always points along the line from the center of the Earth to the center of the moon. At one time the moon was rotating faster then it is now, but the moon had to bend and flex as this bulge shifted around. Energy was lost to friction (rocks grinding against one another), and the moon's rotation slowed until it was gravitationally locked to the Earth.
But don't take my word for it, I'm just a rocket scientist.
Re:Why, a quake goes off, of course. (Score:2)
Answers to your question. (Score:1)
Yeah, sure.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Yeah, sure.. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Yeah, sure.. (Score:2)
The future... is now (Score:5, Funny)
Therefore, I am introducing the MWTDA (Molemen, Warlock, and Troll Defense Act). All citizens are to be in posession of:
* Either a large water gun or a hose
* Trashbags
Military combat units are also under orders to be in posession of the forementioned weaponry.
[Obligatory Simpsons Quote]
[Homer] You're right. I'll deal with those murderous trolls.
[Bart] Huh?
[Homer] I mean - I'll deal with those murderous trolls.
[Homer] (Being chased) Marge! Lisa! Now!
* Marge and Lisa open fire on the jockeys with a watergun and hose - incapacitating them.
[Homer] Bart - Go get me a trashbag.
Re:The future... is now (Score:1, Funny)
We're ready for them. When the ground opens up and the soldiers are released, buildings and freeways will collapse crushing them.
All we have to do is ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:All we have to do is ... (Score:1)
What stopped it was adding a single point support approximately 2 meters in length.
- Tony
Re:All we have to do is ... (Score:4, Funny)
Most of California, despite heroic attempts by the Govinator, violently slips into the pages of History.
Washington and all other civilization on the west coast is saved.
--Cam
PS The Church rewrites the Soddom and Gamora tale to reflect current events.
Re:All we have to do is ... (Score:1)
Re:All we have to do is ... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:All we have to do is ... (Score:2, Funny)
It will be after "The Big One"
Re:All we have to do is ... (Score:2)
"What about Portland?"
"Please, be serious. Nothing happens in Portland."
Re:Invitation (Score:2)
SHHHH!! BE QUIET!!
We don't want the housing prices to keep rising, and the ski slopes are crowded enough!
Belive it or not... (Score:5, Informative)
If you keep making predictions... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If you keep making predictions... (Score:3, Funny)
Bah, that's far too much trouble for me. It is much easier to go for "If you keep reading other people's predictions, eventually you will find one that turned out to be true."
Re:If you keep making predictions... (Score:2)
This is his first (public) prediction. Your adage only applies after many predictions have been made (and where too few have been correct).
Re:If you keep making predictions... (Score:3, Funny)
-
Re:Belive it or not... (Score:3, Interesting)
Interestingly enough, his team of researchers are claiming to have predicted the San Simeon earthquake in December and an earthquake last year in Japan. Using the same methods, he is predicting a minimum magnitude 6.5 to strike a 12,000 square mile region of Southern California by September 5th. This 12,000 square mile r
Science Fiction can inform us (Score:4, Interesting)
I read a really cool sci-fi story once where there was a big earthquake coming, everybody believed it and moved east of the line (into Nevada) and waited.
The big day came, the earthquake happened, and
Maybe those of us in Chicago ought to have life rafts, too (grin).
-- Kevin Rice
Re:Science Fiction can inform us (Score:5, Interesting)
Though this is a joke, one musten forget the The New Madrid Fault Line [216.239.37.104], and how many geologists believe that a "big one" could eminate from there, causing much more damage, seeing that buildings in the midwest aren't as "earth quake" proof as those in the west.
A map showing the location... (Score:2)
Yep, any day now. By which I mean next 100000 days (Score:1, Interesting)
Look earthquakes can and do happen. But as to the 'Big One' idea well I hate to be the one to point this out but the reason why that area is above sea level is because it floats so no earthquake can change that fact or sink it. As to moving out in the ocean yea it's going to happen but You me, our kids, our grand kids and our great great great great grand kids are going to be dead before that strip of land moves one mile from where it stan
Re:Yep, any day now. By which I mean next 100000 d (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yep, any day now. By which I mean next 100000 d (Score:2, Funny)
Burn it! Burn it! Burn it! Burn! Burn!... [mwscomp.com]
Re:Yep, any day now. By which I mean next 100000 d (Score:2)
Looks like I have plenty of time to prepare...
Re:Yep, any day now. By which I mean next 100000 d (Score:2)
1) A cross-section of the fault slants like this, as seen facing North:
If that fault served as a major support for that edge of the tectonic plate, and during a quake the western plate slides further west, then it will also likely slide down the slope of the fault.
2) The fault slants like this:
Re:Yep, any day now. By which I mean next 100000 d (Score:3, Informative)
You forgot the real scenario:
California | or / or \ Rest of US...doesn't matter
It's a strike slip fault...California is moving north relative to the rest of the continent at a rate of a cm or two per year, so give it a while (millions and millions of years) and California will border Alaska.
Of course that's a massivly simplified view, but it adequately descibes the situation.
There is absolutely no danger of California ever sinking into the Pacific (sadly), the best we can hope for
Re:Yep, any day now. By which I mean next 100000 d (Score:2)
2. The California plate is moving north, the San Andreas being a strike-slip fault rather than a nascent rift valley. Its evenutal fate is to move to Alaska rather than head out into the Pacific.
3. And what qualified you to make earthquake predictions anyway? You don't seem to know much about the geology around here.
The Continental US (Score:1)
Earth moved (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Earth moved (Score:2, Funny)
a slashdotter, with a 5 digit account number (give or take), getting regular sex
i don't believe it...
Re:Earth moved (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Earth moved (Score:3, Funny)
'I probably get laid as often as you, but at least I get a different girl each time.'
Re:Earth moved (Score:4, Funny)
Beachfront Property (Score:1)
Despite repeated warnings... (Score:2)
Also most web servers in California are not
Hopefully... (Score:1, Insightful)
So what? (Score:5, Interesting)
I mean, come on, people, are we expecting The Big One to cause the entire state of California to break away at its borders, and we start floating around the Pacific Ocean in some sort of bad remake of Space:1999, with Arnold Schwarzenneger in charge of Earth Base California or something?
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
62% chance for a M6.7 or greater striking the San Francisco Bay area in the next 30 years. [usgs.gov]
Re:So what? (Score:2)
We can only hope
Re:So what? (Score:2)
I can see it now. "California: 2004".
(Cue melodramatic funky yet inappropriate scifi theme from Space:1999)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
However the Northridge Earthquake was one of the costliest disasters in United States history [dis-inc.com]. There were also 51 deaths attributed to that quake too.
Revised predictions have an even greater probability of a large earthquake happening in Southern California soon. 85% chance of a M7.0 or greater happening within the next 30 years [scec.org].
Re:So what? (Score:2)
_________________________________________
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Point here I'm trying to make is that, invariably, while they are certainly costly, the damage tends to be relatively trivial - just incredibly messy. We've weathered worse, and we've recovered from FAR worse (1906 SFO, anybody?). Lives can't be replaced, but buildings can - and it doesn't take that long.
And
Re:So what? (Score:2)
I have heard there are types of natural disasters (volcano? landslide? avalanch?) which a person just cannot get insurance against. At least in California, earthquakes is not one of them.
__________________________________________ _ __
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Unless of course the number of insured isn't going to be that high - they can usually refuse to make further bets.
So either few are insured, or the insurance company thinks only a relatively few of the insured will claim in event of an earthquake.
Not Southern Cal (Score:5, Informative)
Many researchers believe the next major earthquake will be in northern California, not southern California. One reason is that the San Andreas fault 'creeps' in the south, slowly releasing energy (so the theory goes). In the north, the San Andreas is locked and last moved in 1906, when it released all its energy at once, devastating San Francisco.
Re:Not Southern Cal (Score:3, Informative)
The last time the San Andreas fault moved in Southern California was the 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake.
The last time it moved in Northern California is the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
Despite this, both areas have a high potential for devastating earthquakes. (The section around San Francisco itself last moved in 1908. The Loma Prieta quake was centered
Re:Not Southern Cal (Score:2)
The '89 quake was on just such a secondary fault, the Hayward fault, way up in the Santa Cruz Mountains near Loma Prieta Peak (hence the earthquake's name).
Ahem... (Score:3, Insightful)
The first link points to a recent earthquake map that has been available for ages. It's on my bookmarks to look at when there is an interesting event.
The other is an article on NASA earthquake research.
Nothing in either points to an increase in frequency and indeed typing "earthquake" and "increase" into Google news turns up no interesting articles.
I guess those top-secret black government agencies have done a great job of keeping this monumental (non) story out of the news.
Re:Ahem... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, this phenomenon isn't always present, and significant fore-shocks (3,4,5 on the richter scale) tend to happen within hours of the bigger hit. There MAY be a swarm of small (2 or less) quakes for weeks beforehand, but these are tough to distinguish from regular background noise (and in fact may be just that.).
I live in earthquake country, and don't worry about it too much.
The San Andreas fault is nice and all, but (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The San Andreas fault is nice and all, but (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The San Andreas fault is nice and all, but (Score:3, Informative)
If that's the case, they're probably safe for another 300 years.
Re:The San Andreas fault is nice and all, but (Score:2)
Re:The San Andreas fault is nice and all, but (Score:2)
It's not hard to see why. With the current administration everything is nobody's fault. I am having trouble finding that one on the map, though.
Slight New Madrid shake yesterday. (Score:3, Interesting)
Recent US Earthquake Activity [usgs.gov]
Re:Slight New Madrid shake yesterday. (Score:2)
Actually, you'd be hard-pressed to find a time when earthquakes weren't occurring on the West Coast. Any New Madrid quake is going to coincide with California low-level seismic activity. It's pretty routine around here.
No It's not the one. (Score:4, Informative)
In fact, the earthquake patterns on the map show that today is a pretty ho-hum day.
Nothing to see here. Move along.
One great big, festering neon distraction (Score:3, Funny)
Learn to swim
Learn to swim (Score:4, Funny)
Eh? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sorry, but since when is a tiny 5.2 earthquake followed by an aftershock at the same location even notable?
5.2's are nothing in Southern California, and you can see a map that looks exactly like that maybe once every month or two.
I imagine that what probably threw people off is the extra earthquake that was originally reported by the USGS. That one was supposed to be centered near Lancaster, or some such, but it wasn't long before they took back the claim on grounds of instrument error.
Sorry about that.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sorry about that.... (Score:2)
Re:Sorry about that.... (Score:2)
Re:Sorry about that.... (Score:2)
Re:Sorry about that.... (Score:2)
I still remember "Vinne passes to Isiah, Isiah passes to Vinnie - he shoots AND HE SCORES!" over ten years ago. It has been a long time to wait for another one.
Re:Sorry about that.... (Score:2)
My first time was good (Score:2, Informative)
Re:My first time was good (Score:2)
However, note that you were 50 miles from the epicenter, and you are on a different faultline. That severely decreases the dramatic effect
If you and the 5.2 were on the same faultline, it would be much more intense.
We felt the San Simeon earthquake in the Bay Area, and we were a couple hundred miles away!
Duct Tape (Score:2, Funny)
Why is it "temblor" and not "trembler"? (Score:2)
I'm tembling with fear over the answers or moderation this post may get.
Re:Why is it "temblor" and not "trembler"? (Score:2)
Best website for quake prediction info (Score:2, Informative)
Be sure to put on your foil hat, as Jim Berkland is a frequent coast to coast guest
Stop Plate Tectonics! (Score:3, Funny)
Calm down chicken little (Score:2)
Whoa, calm down. There's nothing unusual here.
Magnitude 5 earthquakes happen about once or twice every year in Southern California [trinet.org]. There were several smaller quake a few hours after the 5.3, but those are aftershocks and happen after every big quake.
Also, a 3.6 is not unusual at all.
Statewide every week, there are about 5-10 earthquakes that are magnitude 3-4. [usgs.gov] They happen all the time, and aren't really an indicator of anything.
So calm down, take a deep breath and
Re:West Coasters (Score:2)
Those of us who actually live here didn't do much more than look up, say "Hey, the floor's moving" and go on with our lives.
Re:If you want to know whether this is the... (Score:2)