Central U.S. Earthquake Info 120
ronbo142 writes "The United States Geological Survey site has real time (or close to it) information on the now two significant events of the day. Check out their site to enter your experience and view other event specific information."
Click-through (Score:5, Informative)
Or, just click this one: http://pasadena.wr.usgs.gov/shake/cus/ [usgs.gov]
Foreshocks, or is that it? (Score:2)
Re:Foreshocks, or is that it? (Score:4, Informative)
Or, put differently, to know these are foreshocks before the main quake happens requires a level of earthquake prediction we do not yet have.
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It woke me up (Score:3, Informative)
Oh noes we'll be Yellowstowned! (Score:5, Funny)
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So how much did the Magic Fingers attachment set you back?
Re:It woke me up (Score:4, Funny)
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At first I thought the cat jumped up on the bed, but he didn't then I thought maybe my wife was shaking, but she was still. [...] My wife came down a little later and I said "I think we had an Earthquake." She told me I was crazy, then she saw it in the news a little later in the day, and sent me a link for the USGS.
Wooha, talk about imaginary girlfriends... Translation:
At first I thought the cat jumped up on the bed, but he didn't then I thought maybe my sex doll was shaking, but she was still. [...] My man-pretending-to-be-a-woman-who-I-like-to-call-wife came online a little later and I wrote "I think we had an Earthquake." He said I was crazy, then he saw it in the news a little later in the day, and sent me a link for the USGS.
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Bed Shaking Fun (Score:2)
Seriously though, it did wake her up and we live in Dayton, OH.
(note: I know no one will believe me that a slashdot person has a girlfriend, but she is a civil engineering major, and thus also a geek)
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In my half-awake stupor, my little 3-year old daughter jumped into our bed with this crazy story about how monsters were in her room and had shaken her bed. Of course, I consoled her with the white lie that there aren't any monsters and only realized on my drive into work that she was not completely imagining the situation! Oh, well. Another less-than-perfect answer from Daddy.
God is a Civil Engineer (Score:3, Funny)
Only one moderate quake and an aftershock (Score:5, Informative)
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> In actuality there was a moderate 5.2 followed by what is apparently a 4.6 aftershock.
In the midwest, a 4.6 is a pretty big quake. There aren't any fault lines in the area, so we don't often get much above a 3. 5.2 is record-books stuff, no fooling.
We don't get hurricanes either. Our primary form of "natural disaster", in terms of frequency, is probably either ice storm or flood, though of course the first thing everybody t
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In the midwest, a 4.6 is a pretty big quake. There aren't any fault lines in the area, so we don't often get much above a 3. 5.2 is record-books stuff, no fooling.
There's at least one fault line in the midwest, the New Madrid Seismic Zone [wikipedia.org].
FalconRe: (Score:1)
faults (Score:2)
Huh. I did not know that. In fact, I didn't even know it was possible to have a fault line of any significance in the middle of a tectonic plate like that. Interesting.
"Many faults occur far from active plate boundaries. [wikipedia.org]
Falcon"two significant events" (Score:2, Informative)
I slept right through it (Score:3, Funny)
Felt both and it brought back memories (Score:2)
Sort of brought me back to the days I lived in Bremerton WA.
I Survived the Great Quake of 2008 (Score:3, Informative)
PS, I honestly thought there was a monster under my bed last night during the initial shake.
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My roommate said around 11pm central time there was nice aftershock.
It was actually at around 11AM EDT (10AM local time at the epicenter). I am in indianapolis, and the morning one I thought the dog was having a bad dream and shaking the bed. I didn't know it was an earthquake until I logged in and went to google news.
The large aftershock happened while I was at work, and it was amusing seeing the heads slowly pop out of the cubical farm one by one like gophers from their burrows while it was happening.
It was actually at around 11AM EDT (Score:2)
The USGS shows 3 earthquakes on the 18th [usgs.gov]. One in Indiana at 04:36:58 CDT. The two others in Illinois at 05:36:33 CDT and 10:14:17 CDT.
FalconRe: (Score:2)
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The one SW of Vincennes, IN was actually in Illinois. Vincennes is near the state border.
You'll have to take that up with the USGS, it came from their data.
FalconRe: (Score:1)
The last time I experienced an earthquake was, oh, 25 or so years ago in Montreal while I was in a bank guy's office co-signing a loan. Both parties on either side of the desk thought the other party had a "nervous leg" and was vibrating the desk. No recoverable coins fell out of the banker, unfortunately, but the loan went through.
When will people listen? (Score:5, Funny)
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Iben Browning was right! (Score:2)
So I guess this makes Iben Browning [showme.net] right!
17 years late. And off by a magnitude of 3.
5.2 is not a big quake (Score:2)
Re:5.2 is not a big quake (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course, when we get half an inch of rain here, the TV starts blathering about STORMWATCH 2008. It's all about what's typical for the region.
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I just moved to Columbus from Cleveland, a whole 140 miles south... now, suddenly, when six inches of snow hits, they declare it the "Blizzard of '08" and shut down the city. *sigh*
I used to walk to school in that much snow.
Uphill.
Both ways.
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Punk.
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You know when you say UID for some reason today I think of IUD [wikipedia.org].
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But yeah, it's all about what people are used to. I lived in the UK a bit and when weather dropped to around freezing the response was a lot like what it is here when it's 20 below.
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Still, it's cheap material for reality TV shows.
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Re:5.2 is not a big quake (Score:5, Interesting)
I have to admit though, the first one I probably would have slept through had it not been for my wife panicking and connecting her elbow with my face, but the second I felt as I was sitting at my desk at work and watched my monitors wobble back and forth. The second I could've easily mistaken for a large convoy of trucks going past the office if only our office was on a bridge over the highway. The first, once I was standing up (thanks to the expedient of body parts) was enough to shake the entire house and toppled a table lamp. Other than that at first my rather groggy brain started to wonder if it was just something freaky happening with my house until I opened the back door to let my dog out and heard what sounded like a rioting zoo in the woods behind my house. Then I knew it was a quake, and then it was just a matter of going to USGS website and seeing what the magnitude was.
Really quite an odd experience. Although they talk a lot about the New Madrid fault and how an earthquake of 7+ magnitude is overdue, you don't really think about it much until a quake really hits. On the bright side, maybe this mornings tremors will make people think more about earthquakes and the effect they can have.
5.2 is a big quake to those who've never felt one before. My personal high is a 6.8 but that wasn't in St. Louis, either
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(If a Midwesterner wants to get back at a Californian for being pussies about earthquakes, all they have to do is mention tornados. Or even just thunderstorms. On a business trip to Milwaukee two c
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Consider this map:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:NMSZ_Vergleich.jpg [wikipedia.org]
I'm not saying that people who just experienced their first earthquake are going to be rational in their reporting. But the local geology makes a big difference.
I live in Peoria, probably 200 miles away and the first woke me out of a sound sleep. Myself and my co-workers felt the aftershock later on.
People in St. Louis (128 miles away from the epicenter accord
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I live in St. Charles, 160 miles from the epicenter of this morning's quakes... as the crow flies. I definitely felt it both times, as did my wife and kids. As did a number of people as most of the neighborhood were up in pretty short order after the quake (I could see a number of TV's on, trying to watch the news). The timing was also too perfect to be coincidence, twice
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It should be mentioned that there are two different scales at play here. The VI reported above is on the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale, [wikipedia.org] which measures the intensity of a quake as reported by eyew
how to tell a native from a transplant (Score:2)
If a Midwesterner wants to get back at a Californian for being pussies about earthquakes, all they have to do is mention tornados. Or even just thunderstorms.
Yea, growing up in Florida friends of mine and I had this saying, "You can tell a true Floridian from a transplant when a hurricane comes along. While the transplants throw their arms up in the air and scream 'let's get out of here' the Floridian says it's tyme to batten down the hatches.
On a business trip to Milwaukee two clients from CA literal
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While it might not be high on the scale, earthquakes from southern Illinois typically have a much wider effect than those in California. Its not uncommon for quakes here to be felt over 1000 miles away. The New Madrid Quake of 1812 was supposibly felt over 1 million square miles while the San Francisco 1906 quake was only felt over 6000 square miles. See this image [wikipedia.org]
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Where do you live where 5.2 is of no significance? California? Oregon, Washington and Alaska all have earthquakes stronger than is even *possible* for the entire state of California, so don't go making a big deal about your next 8.0.
And don't let's even bring up Yellowstone...
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I was about 3 years old when a strong earthquake hit So. California where I lived and I remember it.
OK, I just looked it up 'cuz I was thinking it was 1969 but it was actually 1971 [usgs.gov], so I was four -- it was a 6.6. I lived in No. Hollywood.
I liked this sentence about that quake: "The newly built, earthquake-resistant buildings at the Olive View Hospital in Sylmar were destroyed - four five-story wings p
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The above information is taken from:
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/regional/states/ [usgs.gov]
and
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/regional/states/state_largest.php [usgs.gov]
However, Alaska, Washington and Oregon all have faults capable of creating earthquakes larger than is possible in California.
For some context, no
And don't let's even bring up Yellowstone... (Score:2)
Now that should be a big concern for people who worry about Global Warming. For those who don't know Yellowstone is a Supervolcano [solcomhouse.com] which when it erupts will emit more greenhouse gases than man can think of.
FalconOne of the largest in recent history. (Score:3, Informative)
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The tinfoil on my head says.... (Score:1)
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Quake felt as far as... (Score:2)
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http://www.thestar.com/News/Canada/article/415921 [thestar.com]
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Webicorders? (Score:4, Informative)
What I don't know is whether there is anything comparable in the areas affected by these central US tremors. A description of experiences is useful, but plenty of reports will have those. Those are easy to come by. Much rarer is actual raw data, actual hard information on the nature of the quake. A quantitative experience, rather than a qualitative one. There will be much more to the story than what could be felt or described through experience, and that "more" bit is the bit that seperates understanding from simply witnessing. The latter facilitates understanding but is not a substitute for it.
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How about this one? [usgs.gov]
HDIS stands for Hopedale, Illinois, a tiny town on the bluffs of the Illinois River north of Peoria. But apparently, they have a seismographic station. Weird.
Also interesting to note is the absence of seismographic stations immediately around the New Madrid fault zone, here [usgs.gov]
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Well, we can't have detailed information about any dangerous activity there possibly causing a panic, or maybe causing citizens to move away from the area and deprive businesses of workers and income, or $Deity-forbid, insist the government take actions to insist that building codes are updated and cost the construction and real-estate development industries money! Besides, it's jus
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I think it was Kansas that t
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Please back up this statement with a citation to applicable law (other than, e.g., laws against detonating destructive devices). AFAIK merely starting an earthquake, absent unlawful external stimuli such as the use of nuclear explosives, is not illegal.
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I believe you completely, but the phrase above is the key part. I wouldn't be looking if I knew where to find it, and as there isn't uniform coverage (not everywhere gets earthquakes) it's impossible to know if there's coverage unless you do know where to find it. This isn't intended as a criticism of your comments, which are genuinely helpful, but it is intended as a criticism of the US Geological Survey, the various seismic network websites I have accessed (web navigation hell)
In SPringfield, I slept through the 5.2, but .. (Score:3, Informative)
I was awake and in my office for the 4.6 aftershock. It rattled some things, but nothing fell off shelves, etc. No panic, although I did have some thoughts about the 100+ year old brick wall of the adjoining building that forms one side of my office.
MAN I didn't feel it (Score:2)
Not a big deal (Score:3, Interesting)
We have far more to worry about with industrial accidents, dangerous railroad crossings and crazy weather around here.
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Re:Not a big deal (Score:4, Informative)
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I'll be sure and remember to sleep through the next one too :)
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However, seismic activity on the New Madrid fault line is a big deal because it is know for creating very high magnitude events >8.0 which in a seismically un-prepared area such as the central US, will be extremely devasting. As a structural engineer, I know that most of the buildings are not anywhere near the level they need to be at for se
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Ground rumbled a bit, a few things fell over. This is nothing major so I don't know what the big deal is other than it's a slow news day.
It wasn't a big deal for an earthquake from California on up to Alaska, but it's a big deal for the Midwest where it happened.
Falconquaking (Score:1)
Neither of them made my chimney fall, so its a good thing I guess.
One of these days the Wabash and New Madrid faults are going to wake up and this whole area will be in a maze of chaos.
Air Force Conspiracy (Score:2)
It woke me up with moderate shaking, which lasted about 10 seconds. I remember thinking "that was a big damn truck that went by", and going back to sleep. It knocked pictures askew, but didn't cause any damage.
It is, however, VERY SUSPICIOUS!
The two nights prior to the earthquake there were UFO sightings and hundreds of 911 calls reporting large explosions in the air. The Air Force
Re:Air National Guard Conspiracy: Earthquake light (Score:2)
The National Guard scrambled F-16's for "UFOs" and ended up waking people when one of their pilots freaked out and went super sonic. It makes much more sense than "training" and "flares" since flares aren't pseudo-stationary for 30+ minutes, and pilots don't go super sonic in that area.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthquake_light [wikipedia.org]
http://inamidst.com/lights/earthquake [inamidst.com]
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learning/faq.php?categoryID=8&faqID=103 [usgs.gov]
http://geology.about.com/od/earthquakes/a/EQl [about.com]
New Madrid fault line (Score:4, Informative)
I am fairly sure that this event now is part of normal movement of the fault line, due to happen every 20 to 50 years.
People in the area should expect aftershocks in the next one or two weeks, maybe longer. Btu the aftershock pattern depends on many factors that I don't know all.
For those interested the waveform of the earthquake was recorded by people interested in recording earthquakes in nearby states. The plots can be seen here, http://www.simnet.is/jonfr500/earthquake/othersten.htm [simnet.is]
But I have collected them into one nice web page. The data is near real time and is updated every 5 min, at least that is the case for most of the plots
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabash_Valley_Fault_System
animals and earthquakes (Score:2, Insightful)
Our first thought was that animals are supposed to behave strangely during earthquakes, or after them, or before them, some time around earthquakes. It was 4:40 in the morning so we were hazy on the specifics. Anyway, eager to experiment we leaped out of bed and ran into the front room to where our cat Geoffrey sleeps on the c
It was a bump here (Score:2)
Didn't find out about the quake till this afternoon, although I'm fairly sure I got woke up by an aftershock.
Google Maps Layer (Score:2)
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... In *Sensurround*!!! (Score:2)
Anyone else here remember the '70s [wikipedia.org]? Huh? Anyone? Hello?