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6.3 Earthquake in Arizona.... (But he means NE Nevada)
Anyone feel that one?
Location with respect to nearby cities: 17 km (11 miles) ESE (103 degrees) of Wells, NV 32 km (20 miles) NNW (343 degrees) of Spruce, NV 39 km (24 miles) S (183 degrees) of Wilkins, NV 70 km (43 miles) WNW (303 degrees) of West Wendover, NV 244 km (152 miles) W (279 degrees) of Salt Lake City, UT |
Don't think it was AZ.....AZ isn't 152 miles west of Salt Lake City. unless that's the typo you're referring to rather than "earhtquake".
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Yeah, northeastern Nevada near the Utah border. Here
My theory: key debris from the spy satellite landed there and the government exploded a nuclear bomb to ensure nobody would get their hands on it. |
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Could be. And they've already started on a remake of The Andromeda Strain so that when people speak up they can be disregarded as crackpots unable to distinguish fiction from reality.
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I understand the initial confusion: I am constantly mixing up Arizona and Norway
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You know - that is so weird. I woke up thinking about earthquakes and felt something. I figured it was something else, but couldn't shake the feeling. No pun intended.
Thank you - I wouldn't have looked that one up! |
And chances are, I was the only one close enough to feel it...
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Traci?
Geeze, E, you move you UT and your area is getting unheard of snow and now feeling earthquakes. I think it's a sign :p |
Way too far north for those guys... We do have someone here from Idaho, though, right? Any Oregonians feel it?
ETA: It's like I moved back to Cali... Smog... Now earthquakes. What did I do??? |
Seriously, on my local station's website, they say it was felt in some areas of SoCal. I'm assuming Inland Empire.
Wow, huge. Store here. |
From that story, what is a "home earthquake alarm"? I'd say that if you need a machine to tell you the earth is shaking that it isn't a level of shaking you really need be concerned about.
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Haha, I noticed that! I think people have too much money to blow on random crap out here. Cost of living is relatively low, and while on an average people make less money out here, there are a lot of people that make a TON of money out here. I agree, and beyond that, until I just looked it up, I didn't really consider Utah as being a place that gets earthquakes. Apparently, they do, but in my Californian experience, these are rather tiny, and there's not enough in the way of damage that can be done, unless it landed smack dab in SLC.
Anyhow, I'm relating it to "bought a home, had too much money and spent it on random alarms and buzzers because then we feel somehow safer, even if it's entirely unnecessary." |
Thinking about it, it occurs to me that such might be useful if you're somehow at high risk of avalanche since otherwise imperceptible tremblers could trigger one and it might be a good idea to look up the hill. But I'm guessing not many houses are built at such high risk locations.
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I didn't feel it here in the middle of Oregon but I should call Gary and see if he felt it, as he is down in Southern Oregon.
I didn't realize that Utah had earthquakes either. |
I am no geologist, but wouldn't any place with mountains have the capacity for earthquakes?
And when you get right down to it, wouldn't ANY place in the world have the capacity for earthquakes? |
Yes and no, I think. I'm no expert on seismology, but it seems to be more dependent upon it being an active faultline. Anywhere could have an earthquake, but the likelihood of one happening is what's at qquestion. The mountains were created bajillionties of years ago, and have probably shifted along the plates as a part of it - that's part of a guess on my part. While there are small earthquakes here and there from what I can tell, most are really minuscule compared to what we are used to in SoCal.
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That's why I said anywhere could have an earthquake. I remember one happening just a few years ago in the Midwest somewhere. It's more rare in these areas, thus, "Earthquakes don't happen here" and "Erica brought on Mutha Naytchuh to Utah."
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An earthquake in Nevada? Wow that must've been LOUD! All that loose change moving around....
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My armchair observation: Don't the big ones tend to occur on faults previously unknown or faults thought to be dormant? I don't remember any significant earthquakes on the San Andreas, which is popularly thought to be the one to worry about.
Again, this is WAS* on my part. *WAS = Wild Ass Speculation |
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(Are we talking about plate tectonics or bowels?) Also, areas with frequent earthquakes have building codes appropriate for such events. If California gets hit by a 5.0 there's very little damage. Same quake in a region that sees a 5.0 once every 3000 years will do much more significant damage. So "the big ones" are a matter of relativity. I'm no expert so this could be all WAS on my part too. |
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Don't you guys watch TV?? A 10.0 quake will bring down the Seattle Space needle, swallow trains and collapse everything in Vegas! And then there will be a tusanmi so CA won't even have a chance to become an island!
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So I'll see you in Hell! |
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Needless to say, there's a ton of coverage here on the quake. These poor people had no clue what was going on. :( The town of Wells, NV is in shambles, and worse, since their historic buildings were grandfathered in, they were pretty much destroyed. The town is in shambles.
People seem to be safe, I don't think there are any casualties. |
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