yuandrew
Flashlight Enthusiast
Anyone in the So. California area feel tonight's earthquake at about 9pm ?
I'll probably live to regret this, but i'd like to, at least once in my life, feel the effects of an earthquake.
<snip>... I'll probably live to regret this, but i'd like to, at least once in my life, feel the effects of an earthquake.
It wasn't an aftershock. It was a brand new earthquake. 4.1 in Rowland Heights. But, it happened on the same fault line. The Puente Hills Thrust System. The same fault line that caused the deadly 5.9 Whittier quake in 1987. Looks like our big earthquake drought is official over. Now is the time to prepare for them!also, had a decent little aftershock about 30 minutes ago.
That's true up and down the entire West Coast of the US. I'm starting to get nervous here near San Francisco.As I understand it, a really big earthquake (magnitude 7~8 or so) is more or less overdue in Southern California, correct? Am I the only one who thinks these smaller quakes in the last few months might be a prelude of sorts?
Of course that next "big one" might be out for decades still. :thinking: Or it might not... :duck:
That's true up and down the entire West Coast of the US. I'm starting to get nervous here near San Francisco.
Actually, most of the really tall buildings in SF were built on the original shoreline (Pyramid building) or higher. They drive pilings deep into the ground to the bedrock for stability. My sister was on the 39th floor of the AP Gianini building, the second tallest building in SF back in '89 and she said that the building swayed back and forth about 5 feet at the top. I was actually standing in a parking lot near where the new ballpark is now and that part of SF is landfill. It didn't feel all that bad from where I was. The ground moved side to side with almost no vertical movement (jello effect?) about one foot in either direction. I was literally standing there with one foot in the air getting into my car.I took a Physical Geography class in college that used San Fransisco as an example for a worst case scenario for an earthquake to occur. The instructor pointed out that much of the city was built over a landfill and during an earthquake, the land would shake like Jello. Combine that with the dependency on suspension bridges for an escape route (that could be damaged in a large quake) and a decent amount of tall buildings that would shake more sitting on a Jello-like foundation and you have the recipe for disaster. Good luck.