Earthquake off Northern California 373
merger writes "A 7.0 earthquake (7.4 according to NOAA) occured off of the northern California coast occured at 7:50 p.m. PST triggering a tsunami warning (which was then downgraded to a tsunami bulletin). While searching Google News for information I learned about an earthquake preparedness study for the area which was just published today."
Anyone know how many hurt? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Anyone know how many hurt? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Anyone know how many hurt? (Score:5, Funny)
your family will be very appreciative (Score:5, Funny)
Re:your family will be very appreciative (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Undersea Cables? (Score:2)
Re:Undersea Cables? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Undersea Cables? (Score:2)
Re:Undersea Cables? (Score:2)
When Fry spilled beer on a TV control panel, taking the "Ally McNiel" final off air, the Omicronians invaded 1000 years later (It happened to take 1000 years for the signal to reach them) to demand the final episode.
Re:Undersea Cables? (Score:2, Insightful)
The Matrix has you, parent poster.
Re:Undersea Cables? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Undersea Cables? (Score:3, Informative)
Backup links ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Why? That underwater link that guy mentioned might still be broken, if was indeed broken they probably activated an auxiliary/backup link to route their traffic through and are still working on the severed cable. I rely on a connection via a series of undersea links that have been severed a few times over the last few years by anything from fishermen to mechanical diggers and underwater sand-mining operations. Over here it rarely takes the local telecom more than half an hour to start routing traffic through backup connections but then of course we don't get as quite as many earthquakes here as they do in California
Re:Backup links ... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Undersea Cables? (Score:2)
East Bay Check In (Score:5, Informative)
Hollywood Check In (Score:5, Funny)
What's that? the quake was up north you say?
That's it. No more LSD on weeknights.
Re:Hollywood Check In (Score:2)
Also, whilst not flying around especially I have seen fields full of large Christmas Trees which on later inspection turn out not to have any trees in them at all, let alone Christmas Trees.
Re:Hollywood Check In (Score:2)
Yes you will. But it only works if you take the acid at a strip club.
South West UK check in (Score:5, Funny)
South Central UK check in (Score:5, Funny)
This wasn't anything major. (Score:5, Informative)
Plates shifted, relatively high richter scale, but keep in mind the Richter scale is *not* a linear scale. Nothing like the big tsunami a few months back.
Hell, I live in San Diego, I felt a 5.6 a few days ago. Shook my bed a bit, that was more of an event than this.
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:2)
It's logarithmic. So even a small difference can make a greater difference in its energy output. In this case, much smaller than the Sumatra earthquake.
What matters here is the distance and depth of the epicenter, perhaps. The farther away you are, the better off you'd be (sans tsunami) as far as a quake goes.
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:2)
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:2)
For example, the quake that caused the Tsunami on Boxing Day was right on the surface (of the crust, not at sea-level) but others (more often the land-based ones, in fairness) occur further below the surface (land-level)
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:3, Informative)
Quake Porn (Score:3, Informative)
Re: This wasn't anything major. (Score:4, Funny)
> Shook my bed a bit, that was more of an event than this.
Most slashdotters have never had their beds shaken, so you might want to explain what it's like.
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This wasn't anything major. (Score:2)
Tsunami info from a former park ranger (Score:5, Informative)
Towns like Crescent City are at huge risk, and the city and state are trying to compensate with warning systems (that have been improved since the tsunami in the Indian Ocean). While some buildings have been constructed to withstand tsunamis (the national park headquarters was designed as a "flow through" building so tsunami waves will just break out the first floor windows and flow through the building), the best advice is to climb. Get to high ground as soon as you feel the earth shake. Don't wait for a tsunami warning--just climb!
Also, don't go back to the ocean until you know for sure that it's safe to do so. Apparently, many of the deaths in the 1960s tsunami were a result of the mayor and several other people going down onto a pier to suvery the damage. Because tsunamis are really sets of high waves and sea levle changes, the next set of waves washed them away.
One more interesting tidbit--most tsunami deaths aren't caused by the water itself. Instead, what happens is that the water crashes into buildings destroying them. Additional waves then take all of that debris and use it like battering rams to destroy more buildings. It's the debris that most often causes human deaths and damage in the city. Perhaps a good case for building more tsnuami-safe buildings?
Re:Tsunami info from a former park ranger (Score:2)
The fault line in question is the Cascadia Subduction Zone off the coast of Oregon, which produces large tsunamis on a fairly regular basis--geologically speaking, that is. And there's the problem. Nobody on this side of the Pacific Rim remembers the last damaging Cascadia quake. The Japanese d
Earthquakes can't be usefully predicted (Score:5, Interesting)
This is just a small nit-pick with this assertion. Sorry for dragging it out as I have.
I don't know where you're getting your information from, but I also have a good friend who's a geophysicist, and I know a lot of others in the Earth Sciences department next door to my own. (We have a lot of major earthquake-causing fault lines in New Zealand, and it's a popular place for geophysicists from around the world to hang out.) If someone knows more then I'd welcome a correction, but my understanding is that earthquakes are still almost entirely unpredictible with today's knowledge.
We can look at the history of any site and calculate an average earthquake frequency, just as your site averages every 200 years. If you look a short time into the future, it'll probably remain an average of about 200 years.
But in Earth science terms, a "short" time is millions of years. When the frame of reference is so large, attempting to predict events accurately to hundreds of years is hopeless. An historical average of a big quake every 200 years really doesn't tell us anything useful about the immediate future of a site in terms comparable with a human lifetime.
I've heard people argue about how the stress is released after an earthquake and there's a relation. I think this is a very common misconception that seems intuitive, but doesn't really match the facts as we know. All the geophysicists I've spoken to have claimed that this is mostly fiction, though.
The biggest problem with this approach is that there's no clear and accurate way to even estimate, let alone measure, how much stress there was in the first place. Most of what we can guess simply comes from analysing historical records, and accurate records often don't even exist beyond the past few hundred years, if even that. You might have thought that 7th magnitude quake was big and released a lot of stress, until an 8th magnitude quake suddenly releases ten times as much energy [wikipedia.org], with the earlier quake having made a negligible dent in its force.
If you look historically at the quakes in your area, you'll probably see that they're not set at all evenly. Even if you've gone for 300 years without an earthquake, chances are it's about as likely that you'll get a big one tommorrow as it is that you'll get a big one 1000 years from now. Perhaps you'll get 3 or 4 big ones in the next 3 or 4 decades.
This isn't to say that it's not worth preparing for, though. If you live on a fault, chances are that you'll at least get moderate earthquakes, and over a wide enough population, it's quite likely that some part of it will be hit every so often. (The media doesn't normally report about all of the places that didn't have earthquakes.) Good building standards and response strategies, for instance, are the reason that there may only be a few tens or hundreds of casualties in a well-off country, whereas it might be hundreds of thousands or millions of casualties for an equivalent quake in a third world country.
Re:Earthquakes can't be usefully predicted (Score:5, Insightful)
http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/research/parkfield/ [usgs.gov]
Historical data showed earthquakes occurring in 1857, 1881, 1901, 1922, 1934, and 1966. The pattern average showed an earthquake due by around 1993. The next significant earthquake did not happen until 2004, not exactly on time, but dead accurate compared to your time span of 'millions of years'.
Regarding the advice from your friends; a scientist once told me 'Half of everything that scientists teach is wrong, and we don't know which half it is.' Much of current scientific theory is just that, someone's current theory. Take it with a grain of salt.
Nope. From the USGS again: "The total amount of energy released by the earthquake, however, goes up by a factor of 32."http://earthquake.usgs.gov/recenteqsww/glossary.ht m#magnitude [usgs.gov]
Re:Tsunami info from a former park ranger (Score:3, Insightful)
Insurance likely doesn't cover "acts of god" either.
timely article (Score:4, Funny)
The Map didn't forcast it (Score:5, Informative)
If you look now though, there are two areas of fairly high risk.
Don't use this map for anything important, like planning picnics.
Still, I check this every day, and I am suprised that I was given a reference to test its accuracy so soon.
Still, it has updated today in light of the events.
Slashdot should not be my primary news source :(. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Slashdot should not be my primary news source : (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Slashdot should not be my primary news source : (Score:3, Funny)
Sarge is out?! Someone pinch me. (Score:5, Funny)
False Alarm (Score:5, Informative)
weird alert (Score:2)
here is another good site for seeing all of our (Score:2, Informative)
you can see this big one off to the upper left, but 'quakes are no big thing around these parts - just look, we get ~hundreds a day; similar to
Cowabunga! (Score:3, Funny)
Surf's Up, Dude!!
Re:Cowabunga! (Score:2)
Everywhere else people would run away and get to high ground etc. On teh Californian coast, thousands of people would flock to the beaches clutching surfboards, yelling "dude" and "like totally rad, man" and maybe I'll catch my first tube today". Except the ones mumbling about 50 year storms of course. They'd be booking flights to Australia.
You mean Point Break isn't a d
Link to Realtime Earthquake List (Score:3, Informative)
In this case the same thing is happening. You'll note in the list that there have already been a number of aftershocks over the past few hours.
They also have a RSS feed, so presumably you could create your own tsunami warning system.
Re:Link to Realtime Earthquake List (Score:2)
I subscribed to the USGS bigquake mailing list after the 26 Dec 2004 Tsunami. This is probably the same information as the RSS feed but the USGS cautions that it is not a warning system.
I have been getting emails about 50 minutes after the quake and I think there is a manual review process before the mail is sent out.
I think this would be too slow for a warning system.
We Really Aren't Prepared (Score:3, Insightful)
Japan (Score:5, Interesting)
They have a seven-point scale, with 1 being that you only just feel the quake if you are lying down or otherwise sensitive; to 7 being that nonhardened buildings collapse, and many expected injuries and deaths. Quake reports are usually in the form of maps with this info overlayed.
For most of the public, that is the kind of info you want when an earthquake has occurred, rather than the intensity at the origin. It tells you much clearer if it's time to worry about friends and relatives or not.
Alaska Got Some Big Ones, Too (Score:4, Informative)
" Aleutians rocked by series of big quakes [alaska.edu]
The countless quakes started short after midnight. The biggest one, with a preliminary magnitude of 6.9, struck at 9:10 a.m. Tuesday. There were reports of items falling off shelves in Adak, about 175 miles from the epicenter.
The series of quakes occurred where the Pacific and North American plates collide. Most were in the range of 4.5 and 5.7."
Seems to be a relation.
KoA
Eagle crashes into living room of a Ketchikan home [blogspot.com]
MJ! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:MJ! (Score:2)
Re:MJ! (Score:2)
I was at the keynote and dangit! I would have loved for a quake to hit right there.
Re:MJ! (Score:2, Funny)
Here in Santa Cruz... (Score:2)
Timing (Score:5, Funny)
earthquake/tsunami insurance? (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, it's been pointed out to me, semi-recently, that most Californians do not have earthquake insurance.
I dunno about you, but that, with the combination of homes which average $509k, is a source of worry for me. Any Californians able to comment on earthquake/tsunami insurance?
Re:earthquake/tsunami insurance? (Score:3, Interesting)
Earthquake insurance in California is very expensive and hard to get. For some reason, insurers don't like the thought of a million people suddenly needing to replace the main joists* in their houses. And so they set the premiums extremely high or refuse to offer coverage altogether.
* I have no idea what a "joist" is.
Re:earthquake/tsunami insurance? (Score:2)
Joists are horizontal or near-horizontal structural members of smaller dimensions than beams. Floor joists are the principal element of a wooden floor; the flooring is nailed to the top of the joists and, if the room below has a finished ceiling, the ceiling material is nailed to the bottoms of the joists. Flat and very low-slope roofs have roof joists in place of rafters.
Re:earthquake/tsunami insurance? (Score:2, Funny)
Right. So I'm going to move somewhere because after the quake hits and destroys all my stuff, I'll be able to collect insurance (if I didn't killed killed in the disaster).
No thanks, I think I'll stick with my original plan, and move somewhere where I'll be safe from earthquakes altogether. That's why I'm starting grad school next year at Berkeley.
Oh shit. You g
Re:earthquake/tsunami insurance? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:earthquake/tsunami insurance? (Score:2)
Um... doesn't that really just equate to everyone who lives there buys the insurance through taxes, and thus you've got not a benefit, but a mandatory service you have to buy? Doesn't mean you wouldn't want it, but since it's handled by the government, doesn't that imply an additional overhead/bureaucracy load that would be more efficiently handled through the private sector?
And your point is? (Score:3)
Slashdot is "News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters."
Reporting on Tsunamis is nothing more than sensationalism for a site like this. This article should definately be moderated as off-topic.
Which brings up a point. We moderate posts, we even moderate how other people moderate. Let's get the ability to moderate articles. This way we will stop getting "News for non-nerds. Stuff that doesn't matter."
Re:And your point is? (Score:3, Insightful)
A tsunami warning system is both a technological and sociological device, as discussed by the last linked article. While it was certainly a bit thin on details, it is probably of interest to at least some nerds, even if you personally don't give
Re:And your point is? (Score:2)
Re:And your point is? (Score:3, Insightful)
We're nerds, and this is news. Condition one met. This probably matters to a lot of people. Condition two met. Slashdot has never been limited to technology news (see also: politics.slashdot.org).
Slashdot had, bar none, the best 9/11 coverage in the world. Seriously. I learned far more from eyewitnesses who posted to the site than I ever did from corporate news sources. If there had really been a tsunami, you'd probably be reading the best newsfee
IANA Geologist, But.... (Score:3, Interesting)
As I type this, I see >800 quakes on the California/Nevada quake map [usgs.gov], and I wonder how much more stress is building up around Silicon Valley. (Yes, I live and work in the Valley.)
I suspect that big slips north and south increase the odds of a slip in between. Are there any geologists out there who can verify this?
what im more concerned about is (Score:2)
now think of the deluge they received last winter.
makes you think eh?
it wont affect me since i recently relocated to miami because the tech job market was terrible with downward pressure on wages with upward financial pressure on everything else. it was move or go bankrupt. but all of my family still lives there and i real
I don't know about you guys.... (Score:2, Informative)
The area is a caldera, from what I can tell, and it looks like it's ready to blow !!!!!!
1.9 2005/06/14 21:19:08 38.803N 122.814W 2.9 1 km ( 1 mi) NW of The Geysers, CA
3.9 2005/06/14 19:57:00 38.848N 122.823W 3.6 6 km ( 4 mi) NNW of The Geysers, CA
1.7 2005/06/14 18:46:08 38.832N 122.799W 1.3 4 km ( 2 mi) N of The Geysers, CA
1.6 2005/06/14 09:30:10 38.814N 122.809W 4.1 2 km ( 1 mi) N of The Geysers, CA
2.3 200
on the Richter scale? (Score:2, Insightful)
seriously - on UK news channels, BBC etc, they always quote 'earthquake of strength X on the Richter scale'. personally i find this extremely annoying since it's a completely superfluous figure-of-speech - unless there's some other scale which people use to measure earthquakes.
anyone know different?
Re:on the Richter scale? (Score:2, Informative)
I guess it's pretty urgent (Score:2)
Re:Shrug, (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:You're an idiot for not knowing CAPE. (Score:2)
Re:You're an idiot for not knowing CAPE. (Score:2)
Re:You're an idiot for not knowing CAPE. (Score:2, Funny)
That's PEDANTS
HTH
Re:You're an idiot for not knowing CAPE. (Score:2, Informative)
And local TV stations routinely (about once every month or so in the summer) show pictures of an F1 somewhere... sometimes as a waterspout in
Re:You're an idiot for not knowing CAPE. (Score:2)
I can... my sister was there. She's got very bad luck.
It was Aug 1999. And I'm pretty sure it was an F2. The mid 80s buick wagon I was driving was hardly lifted off the ground and I didn't have to dodge flying cars. Come to think about it it was lots of fun.
Re:You're an idiot for not knowing CAPE. (Score:2)
All righty! That that big swirling thing in aug 1999 that hit my hotel an hour or so after checkout time wasn't tornado?
I guess I was just lucky to be in Salt Lake when they had an F2 class tornado.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_Lake_City_Torna d o [wikipedia.org]
I remember that day well, the tornado hit the hotel just as I was leaving on my way to pickup my sister in Ogden. Had I not had a wedding to go to, I would have hung around and got some shots.
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2, Insightful)
I hope that you're as keen to repeat your hilarous gag when death and destruction on the scale of last year's Asian tsunami hits closer to where you live.
Sorry, but I hardly think that this is the sort of thing that you make light
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashdotters seem to think so, as long is it doesn't affect Americans. every "foreign" disaster eleicts a bunch of ethnic/outsourcing (if in Asia or particularly India) jokes, all modded "Funny". Make similar jokes about American deaths and it's an instant flamebait/troll mod. He might get away with it here since no one seems to have died.
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
That's not a "fact", but I share the opinion. I was just pointing out the double standard that usually applies here. For instance, the bushfire in Canberra got a lot of "barbecue" jokes. Despite dozens being burnt alive few seemed to think this was inappropriate.
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't judge the group by the vocal (readily offended) minority. There are plenty of Americans who don't mind jokes about our own tragedies -- what better way to get it behind than with humor?
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
I am wondering if an African American little girl would be kid
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:2)
Re:Earthquake? Bah.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Not so long ago I lost my dad to heart disease, a perpetual natural disaster that kills more people than 10 WTC attacks every month. And you know what, I still laugh when Homer has a heart attack. If I were to die a horrible horrible death, I'd at least hope someone could get a giggle out of it.
Re:Offtopic response to sig (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Offtopic response to sig (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh and re not eating shellfish: we have fridges now, thanks.
[1] Consider where the two main cocksnipping religions originated.
Re: I was distracted by my masturbating (Score:2)
> I was distracted by my masturbating when it happened
Hemingway says the earth only moves for you three times in your whole life.
Re:Northern California Coast??? (Score:4, Informative)
California has about 840 miles of coastline.
You bet we've got a north (Oregon sorth to roughly the Golden Gate), central (Godlen Gate south to Santa Barbara) and south (Santa Barbara on down) coast. North, central, and southern sections represent the general north-south location of that west-facing coastline.
While the coastline in southern california faces southwest and Los Angeles is east of Reno (the state is distinctly boomerang-shaped), most Californians think of the coast as a westerly-facing one.
Doubly wrong post. (Score:3, Informative)
Since the 1700s, not a single earthquake in California that was over 6.5 has caused a tsunami there.
There have been 8 California quakes that have generated tsunamis. [noaa.gov] Though the San Andreas Fault isn't liable to generate a tsunami because it slips to the right instead of up/down, some California quakes are able to generate undersea landslides. Click on the image [mbari.org] on this Mbari page and you'll see a substantial scar left by a landslide off the Santa Barbara Coast.
Secondly, yes