NOTE: This is the patern i have been looking for
2 quakes in close proximity
the 1st 1 being above 4.5 and the 2nd one being bigger inside a few hours of the 1st one
this is what i was wonderig about as a patern of a larger movement about to happen.
what do i think will result ? dont know
it maybe unrelated
given the above 5 i would gues it to be around a 7.4 maybe 7.3 somewhere on the close corresponding plate boundary on a direction moving westward or on the west side of the closest plate boundary.
M 5.1 - Indian Ocean Triple Junction
Time2018-10-01 06:02:49 (UTC)
Location26.573°S 67.597°E
Depth 10.0 km
M 5.3 - Indian Ocean Triple Junction
Time2018-10-01 07:21:40 (UTC)
Location26.678°S 67.626°E
Depth 10.0 km
NOTE: just prior to this was a ridge(my speculation of upward movement/release) AND in the same location
location wise i would gues around lower arabian sea area, hopefully well away from land and people.
M 5.2 - Southwest Indian Ridge
Time2018-10-01 04:27:59 (UTC)
Location 36.157°S 52.467°E
Depth 10.0 km
(Oct 1, 2018 09:54 AM)RainbowUnicorn Wrote: [ -> ]NOTE: This is the patern i have been looking for
2 quakes in close proximity
the 1st 1 being above 4.5 and the 2nd one being bigger inside a few hours of the 1st one
this is what i was wonderig about as a patern of a larger movement about to happen.
what do i think will result ? dont know
it maybe unrelated
given the above 5 i would gues it to be around a 7.4 maybe 7.3 somewhere on the close corresponding plate boundary on a direction moving westward or on the west side of the closest plate boundary.
M 5.1 - Indian Ocean Triple Junction
Time2018-10-01 06:02:49 (UTC)
Location26.573°S 67.597°E
Depth 10.0 km
M 5.3 - Indian Ocean Triple Junction
Time2018-10-01 07:21:40 (UTC)
Location26.678°S 67.626°E
Depth 10.0 km
NOTE: just prior to this was a ridge(my speculation of upward movement/release) AND in the same location
location wise i would gues around lower arabian sea area, hopefully well away from land and people.
M 5.2 - Southwest Indian Ridge
Time2018-10-01 04:27:59 (UTC)
Location 36.157°S 52.467°E
Depth 10.0 km
looking at this
USGS earth quake government site
south of indonesia
USGS map of 6.0 plus lots of 5.0
the patern
M 5.0 - 33km SSW of Nggongi Satu, Indonesia
Time 2018-10-01 23:12:02 (UTC)
Location 10.491°S 120.154°E
Depth 10.0 km
M 5.4 - 31km S of Nggongi Satu, Indonesia
Time 2018-10-01 23:27:06 (UTC)
Location 10.475°S 120.203°E
Depth 22.3 km
then the 6.0
M 6.0 - 33km S of Nggongi Satu, Indonesia
V
ShakeMapGREEN
PAGER
Time 2018-10-01 23:59:43 (UTC)
Location 10.496°S 120.221°E
Depth 29.0 km
then a 5.9
M 5.9 - 30km SSW of Nggongi, Indonesia
V
ShakeMapGREEN
PAGER
Time 2018-10-02 00:16:45 (UTC)
Location 10.462°S 120.159°E
Depth 26.0 km
then a series of smaller
4.2
M 4.2 - 33km S of Nggongi, Indonesia
Time 2018-10-02 04:11:47 (UTC)
Location 10.493°S 120.287°E
Depth 28.4 km
then a bit larger 5.6
M 5.6 - 33km SSW of Nggongi Satu, Indonesia
V
ShakeMapGREEN
PAGER
Time 2018-10-02 04:49:31 (UTC)
Location 10.475°S 120.121°E
Depth 20.7 km
4.6
M 4.5 - 34km S of Nggongi Satu, Indonesia
Time 2018-10-02 06:09:18 (UTC)
Location 10.503°S 120.290°E
Depth 15.9 km
4.8
M 4.8 - 32km SSE of Nggongi, Indonesia
Time 2018-10-02 07:01:09 (UTC)
Location 10.483°S 120.309°E
Depth 35.0 km
Some reports are saying that the (latest) Indonesia tsunami's death toll has risen above 1,200. Still a small fraction of the 228,000 that died in the super-giant Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004, after a huge (upwards of mag 9.1) earthquake near the Indonesian island of Sumatra. (That has to be one of the biggest natural disasters of all time.)
But we can't belittle this one. A death toll of 1,200 makes this a certifiably major disaster by normal standards.
https://www.livescience.com/63721-tsunam...nesia.html
"Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for Indonesia's National Disaster Mitigation Agency, told the BBC that the tsunami detector buoys --- 21 floating devices connected to deep sea sensors --- weren't working. The detection system had either been damaged or stolen...
This area of Indonesia has seen about 15 earthquakes with magnitudes larger than 6.5 over the last century, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The largest, a magnitude 7.9, hit in 1996, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) north of this new earthquake, and resulted in 10 deaths."
(Oct 2, 2018 07:10 PM)Yazata Wrote: [ -> ]Some reports are saying that the (latest) Indonesia tsunami's death toll has risen above 1,200. Still a small fraction of the 228,000 that died in the super-giant Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004, after a huge (upwards of mag 9.1) earthquake near the Indonesian island of Sumatra. (That has to be one of the biggest natural disasters of all time.)
But we can't belittle this one. A death toll of 1,200 makes this a certifiably major disaster by normal standards.
https://www.livescience.com/63721-tsunam...nesia.html
"Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for Indonesia's National Disaster Mitigation Agency, told the BBC that the tsunami detector buoys --- 21 floating devices connected to deep sea sensors --- weren't working. The detection system had either been damaged or stolen...
This area of Indonesia has seen about 15 earthquakes with magnitudes larger than 6.5 over the last century, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The largest, a magnitude 7.9, hit in 1996, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) north of this new earthquake, and resulted in 10 deaths."
haiti quake
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Haiti...Casualties
haiti had about 200,000 to 250,000 killed by their falling concrete roofs in a matter of a couple of seconds.
most of those places dont have a census
considering entire familys would have been washed out or burried, there is likely to be no one for weeks to report the missing.
(Oct 7, 2018 06:47 AM)RainbowUnicorn Wrote: [ -> ]https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-45775276
Haiti struck by deadly earthquake
M 5.9 - 19km NW of Ti Port-de-Paix, Haiti
Just above the 5.8 magnitude which was the strongest I ever personally encountered; though of course it was watered down by distance from the epicenter. Jarred the building for a whole minute in a way that reminded me of an old washing machine in spin-cycle rattling the insides of a bygone-model mobile home that wasn't anchored very well to the ground. The latter familiar experience from childhood (at a friend's residence) in turn kind of took the sting out worrying that the "more recent" edifice was going to fly apart anymore than that mobile home routinely did when a particular appliance dived into its wringing act.
~