Earthquakes
#16
Posted 14 June 2005 - 06:31 PM
#17
Posted 14 June 2005 - 07:45 PM
http://www.kptv.com/
___All in all, many people came to safety in the face of possible disaster in an organized fashion.
#18
Posted 17 June 2005 - 11:30 AM
http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/
I highly recommend viewing the many regional seismograms; it is always interesting to note the different arrival times & magnitude registered at different locations for individual quakes.
#19
Posted 17 June 2005 - 12:09 PM
Did the Sumatra Quake seem to coincide with any other large quakes around the world? I didn't hear of any, but the news and web were pretty taken with the tsunami.
#20
Posted 27 July 2005 - 04:41 PM
___There is a rogue earthquake predicting geologist who uses the Moons phases to predict quakes. Find him at http://www.syzygyjob.com/ Very interesting approach.
#21
Posted 29 July 2005 - 06:01 AM
http://earthquake.us....-114.-112.html
#22
Posted 29 July 2005 - 11:51 AM
___Ahhh the distraction of writing!
#23
Posted 29 July 2005 - 10:59 PM
___When I'm on my feet or moving around much, I don't feel the shaking; when I sit still it is quite apparent,
___The Montana swarm continued today; maybe it's the new Yellowstone!?
#24
Posted 31 July 2005 - 12:10 PM
#25
Posted 31 July 2005 - 12:16 PM
orbsycli said:
http://sanjose.earth...S/sje/index.jsp
Cheers,
Buffy
________________________________________________________________-- Tom Lehrer
"You know, I promised my mom and dad I wouldn't do anything stupid after I got out of college....Sorry, Mom!"
Forum Administrator
Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here.
#26
Posted 31 July 2005 - 12:21 PM
i meant those random shifts of the earths plates that make me wonder who's pushing me only to find it was nobody.
#28
Posted 31 July 2005 - 12:33 PM
orbsycli said:
The Long Valley Caldera (south of Mono Lake in Eastern CA) was unusually quiet while we were nearby recently. That's not necessarily a good thing, but we too, "missed the earthquakes". Normally you get one almost every week that you can feel up there....
All Shook Up,
Buffy
________________________________________________________________-- Tom Lehrer
"You know, I promised my mom and dad I wouldn't do anything stupid after I got out of college....Sorry, Mom!"
Forum Administrator
Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here.
#29
Posted 31 July 2005 - 01:25 PM
#30
Posted 31 July 2005 - 05:56 PM
Turtle said:
Other geological features of note are the Mono Craters which are very visible from highway 395 south of Mono Lake, Hot Creek which is a hot spring that in certain fenced off areas is too hot for human consumption (so hot it kills off *all* bacteria and other living organisms and has this eerie blue hue that looks like some other planet), and my favorite Obsidian Dome--known to the locals as "Glass Mountain"--that's this huge outcrop of ingeous rock.
Oh the "Mammoth Scenic Loop" has been there forever, and would be useful as an "escape route" but only in the sense that the folks on Mt St. Helens had time to escape... Its got lots of campgrounds on it and some really outrageous snowmobiling territory off of it. Don't believe the conspiracy theorists: I've got friends who have family roots that go back more than a century, and the "escape" that most of them used it for was on expeditions to blow up the aquaduct....another piece of facinating folklore, but way off topic...
Looks like the USGS is redoing the site that covers this geological wonder in the next month, so keep checking here: http://lvo.wr.usgs.gov/
Cheers,
Buffy
________________________________________________________________-- Tom Lehrer
"You know, I promised my mom and dad I wouldn't do anything stupid after I got out of college....Sorry, Mom!"
Forum Administrator
Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here.

Help
Join now




Promote to Article










