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Earthquakes in California

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by whag00, Sep 28, 2004.

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  1. whag00

    whag00 Member

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    www.cnn.com

    Information is still coming out but they are saying it was a 5.9 with a series of aftershocks.
     
  2. Rocketman95

    Rocketman95 Hangout Boy

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    My sister in Santa Cruz just e-mailed me about it.
     
  3. giddyup

    giddyup Member

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    Is this somehow related to the rumblings at Mt. St. Helens?
     
  4. Castor27

    Castor27 Moderator
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    probably not. The Mt. St. Helens quakes are from pressure build up in the lava dome. They happen periodically and sometimes result in an explosion. The Cali. quakes are most likely from shifts on the fault line.
     
  5. moestavern19

    moestavern19 Member

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    I'm dead. thanks for asking.
     
  6. m_cable

    m_cable Member

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    You're welcome. I live in SO Cal so I didn't feel a thing. (Go ahead. Insert random LA joke here. I've heard them all.)
     
  7. moestavern19

    moestavern19 Member

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    So weird, I felt that last one certainly, this one was in the same place and I didn't feel a thing.
     
  8. Texas Stoke

    Texas Stoke Member

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    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...&e=5&u=/nm/20040927/sc_nm/space_asteroid_dc_2

    Science - Reuters


    Asteroid Toutatis Makes Closest Pass in 651 Years

    Mon Sep 27, 3:13 PM ET Science - Reuters



    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An asteroid named for a Celtic god of war will come as close to Earth this week as it has since 1353.

    The space rock known as Toutatis will come on Wednesday within 960,000 miles of Earth, relatively close by cosmic standards, Astronomy Magazine said in an e-mailed statement on Monday.


    Toutatis poses no danger to Earth. However, if it did hit our planet, it would create a blast with the energy equivalent to 1 million ton of TNT.


    Measuring about 3 miles by 1.5 miles, Toutatis will speed by Earth at 22,000 miles per hour.


    This asteroid makes a roughly four-year trip around the sun that swings from just inside Earth's orbit to outside the orbit of Mars. Because both Earth and Toutatis are in continual motion, the distance between them at closest approach every four years varies greatly.


    On Wednesday, Toutatis will be 250 times brighter than it was two months ago, but it will still be 16 times dimmer than the faintest stars that can be seen with unaided eyes.


    Normally, Toutatis could be spied with binoculars from locations away from city lights, but the brightness of the nearly-full Moon on Wednesday will make the asteroid harder to see.


    No observer in or north of such cities as Denver and Pittsburgh in the United States, or Rome or Madrid in Europe or Beijing in Asia will be able to see Toutatis on Wednesday because it will be below the horizon. Those at these northern latitudes might catch a glimpse of Toutatis on Tuesday, before its closest approach.


    Observers in the Southern Hemisphere who use 6-inch or larger telescopes will be able to follow the asteroid's fast motion across the sky on Wednesday: it should move at the rate of almost three Moon widths in an hour.


    At close approach, Toutatis will be in front of the stars of the southern constellation Centaurus.



    I will put this out here because I'm trying to think if this asteroid passing so close to us could have an effect on the earth in such a way as to cause earthquakes. If I had to take a guess I would say 'yes'.
     

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