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Original Message
"How would it be......"

Posted by Marc on Feb-28-01 at 01:23 PM
I'm talking to one of the guys from my office who is down in LA and he says that it is rainy and miserable down there. I'm in the process of telling him that here in Washington it is bright, sunny and warm and then to top it off that's when the earthquake hit. Funny..... well not really. Ironic then. Here in SW Washington the shockwaves had dissipated to about a 4.5 or so. Still, quite a ride for a half minute or so.

Anybody here from the Seattle area??


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Messages in this discussion
"RE: How would it be......"
Posted by zaphod on Feb-28-01 at 02:06 PM
Just don't start thinking 'bout tornadoes and baseball-sized hail. Now that's a scarey thought.
I would never trade So. Cal. weather and earthquakes for that.
A 4.5 is kinda between fun(4) and exciting(5). While a 6 is something to talk about for a week or two and a 7 gets scarrier by the decimal point. Now an 8-9 (I hear Seattle has the potential for them while LA, SF and SD do not) would be terrifying.


Zaphod---So.Cal. born and raised


"RE: How would it be......"
Posted by Marc on Feb-28-01 at 02:45 PM
Yeah....the quake just south of Seattle was a 6.8 to 7. I have never expirenced anything like that. A couple of 4's and a 5 (a bunch of 2's as well). Looking at the CNN videos, there seems to be quite a bit of damage.

Historically, the PNW has had several catastrophic earthquakes. I'll try to dig up some data when I get the chance.


NW born and raised


"RE: How would it be......"
Posted by zaphod on Feb-28-01 at 03:01 PM
LAST EDITED ON Feb-28-01 AT 04:24 PM (Pacific)

Check out the Alaskan quake of '64
The USGS has a good network of sights for all of the world for quake activity and history.

I can recall 4-5 significant ones(mid 5's or better) I've experienced - Sylmar of 72--7.2 I believe, Whittier of 80something, Sierra Madre of the early 90s( I used to live near both of these so the effects were greater) and Northridge---I got off work for a day. Since, I have moved farther south to San Diego where the quakes are more frequent but much smaller--don't even feel them accually alot of 2s. It seemed that in LA there would be a good jolt 'bout every 5 years or so.

I think Rick is from the No. Cal. area and they get some good ones on a pretty regular basis also.


"Central No. Cal."
Posted by Llevram on Feb-28-01 at 06:11 PM
So, no real quakes for us in the Sacramento area. I think I have felt one or two (born and raised here).

Tools for your Wizardry(r) toolkit


"Quake (tsunami) info"
Posted by Marc on Mar-02-01 at 05:55 PM
There is lots to look at. Here is one on Paleosiesmicity. Or more to the point the tsunami evidence pointing to the event.



"RE: How would it be......"
Posted by Lady_Adrexia on Feb-28-01 at 05:27 PM
I lived in Lacey/Olympia until about two years ago and I have lots and lots of friends there. First question, are you okay?? I was born in Southern California, so I know what earthquakes feel like.



"Hope everyone..."
Posted by mojo on Feb-28-01 at 06:13 PM
...is ok. Can't afford to lose any Wiz players. Born and raised in good ol' Kentucky, I've never ever experienced an earthquake...

...but I could take you to a moonshine still or two that would surely rock your world...


CPoW


"Corn or apple ??"
Posted by Marc on Feb-28-01 at 10:13 PM
Is it the good stuff?

Ya know....the kind that you can get your eyesight back in three days... guaranteed??



"Corn mash..."
Posted by mojo on Mar-06-01 at 03:24 PM
...your eyesight eventually returns...but your toes remain curled for life. Why'dya think none of usins down heah wears shoes, anyhow?

Well...another school shooting today. Anybody wanna discuss our right to bear arms?

CPoW


"I'd rather discuss the right to raise children"
Posted by Llevram on Mar-06-01 at 04:41 PM
Or what should happen to parents that just 'have' children and don't 'raise' them. We've always had the right to bear arms, but the problems with children toting them to school is a relatively new thing.

Tools for your Wizardry(r) toolkit


"Right..."
Posted by mojo on Mar-07-01 at 03:13 AM
...entail reponsibility, Prof. As a society, we don't hear much about responibility anymore. Or even such simple things as the Golden Rule.

Some errors, tho, (been a while since I checked, tho) I believe we have the right to a well armed militia.

Similar to the separation of church and state myth. God was never "separated" from government. (Take out yoah wallet and chweck yoah money ifin you don't believe me.) It was just that the government couldn't establish it's own church. Many original state constitutions required a professed belief in Jesus Christ as a requirement to run for political office.

And what about homeschooling? A viable alternative, or not?

Mebbe the 10 Commandments on a class room wall wouldn't have prevented the tragedy...but mebbe reading Thou shalt not kill wouldn't be all that harmful, either...

CPoW


"Home Schooling, nah, mandatory Military Service :)"
Posted by Llevram on Mar-07-01 at 08:07 AM
When neither parent is home, home schooling is a bit difficult. And the problem is not the school or the schooling, but the lack of - you got it - responsibility at the parental level (IMO).

Tools for your Wizardry(r) toolkit


"Me?? Fine thanks :-)"
Posted by Marc on Feb-28-01 at 10:07 PM
By the time the wave(s) got to SW Washington it was about a 4 or so. Not too bad. I stood up from my desk and gave a play by play account over the phone to a coworker in LA. A few minutes after it was over I went down to the main office to find that everybody went outside. I didn't think it was that strong. Up North in Seattle?? Yeah, I'd run outside too.

Quite a few people got hurt. One died from an apparent heart attack. Overpass and bridge damage will be the key buzz words for the next couple of days. Lots of stuff shut down. Sorta like when it snows more than an inch at a time. We simply don't know how to deal with it.


"RE: Me?? Fine thanks :-)"
Posted by Lady_Adrexia on Mar-01-01 at 11:13 AM
Glad to hear that. Since I don't know where you are in WA...I will just say that the quake's epicenter was outside of the Dupont gate at Fort Lewis, near Tacoma and Nisqually.

That was where we were stationed up until two years ago when the hubby retired from active duty.



"RE: Me?? Fine thanks :-)"
Posted by Lord Gram on Mar-01-01 at 03:20 PM
LAST EDITED ON Mar-01-01 AT 03:22 PM (Pacific)

Heh....My father is currently stationed near Spokane. I know they felt some shocks there, but nothing approcing serious, though Mom wasn;t too happy when the elevator she was in started swaying.

Lord Gram the Light


"Quake II"
Posted by Jimbo -ur on Mar-02-01 at 03:01 PM
I'd not even heard about it, but from my guess, someone at Micro$oft got hold of a pre-release Wiz8 and got their hands on the Astral Dominae, and tried to run it under Win2000 as a plug&play extension

"RE: How would it be......"
Posted by Nebari -ur on Mar-05-01 at 09:28 PM
Not Seattle but I live in St. Louis, MO. It's about 150 miles from the New Madrid fault.

We almost never feel any quakes but the experts around here say that we should have a repeat of the 1811-1812 quakes in the next 50 years or so. The scary thing is that they say the geology is different that the Pacific coast and the shock waves do not attenuate quickly as they do west of the Rockies. They say the 1811-2 quakes were felt almost all the way to the Atlantic coast.

Since we don't get the 4's 5's and 6's here on a regular basis, noone is prepared for the 8.0+ they tell us is coming.


"RE: How would it be......"
Posted by apsen on Mar-06-01 at 06:45 AM
I remember one that was somewhere in Romania.
I was in Moscow at the time. It is practically
all the way across Europe.

"RE: How would it be......"
Posted by myrddin on Mar-13-01 at 02:29 PM
Hey Marc, I live in Seattle.
What part of seattle do you live in? or do you live on the East side? I work in Redmond, but live in Belltown. Maybe we should try to get together sometime or talk or something.

-MyrddinB


"Sorry.............."
Posted by Marc on Mar-13-01 at 06:03 PM
As I mentioned, I live in SW Washington just north of Portland. I do travel to Seattle from time to time on business, perhaps down the road sometime we can work something out.

So what is your earthquake story. I'd like to hear your experience of the quake.


"My EQ Story"
Posted by myrddin on Mar-13-01 at 06:30 PM
Ok, here's my lengthy earthquake story...
sorry for the formatting - i cut/pasted from another place and btw, Kathryn is my girlfriend.

Enjoy!


I was in the computer lab I work in at Building 25 on the Microsoft redmond
campus. The lab is on the 3rd floor of the 3 story building. I was typing some stuff
when there was a bit of a shake, and I thought someone was stomping around or
moving a shelf or something. About 3 seconds later there was another little
shake. At that point I was a little annoyed at whoever was making all the racket.
Then a couple seconds later the whole building started shaking and I turned to my
co-worker who works next to me and he looked at me and I said.."It's an
earthquake!"

At that point almost everyone in the lab was hurrying outside of the building or
standing in the doorways. Now, I know they a lot of people say to stand in a
doorway because it is reinforced, but that's a bit of a misonception. I've heard
earthquake survival specialists say that's not always your best option because
the door could swing closed really hard and whack you a good one, but I digress.


Anyway, I grabbed my cell phone out of my jacket and headed outside. I looked
back into the lab and saw several computers falling off of the shelves they are
on. It was a bit scary, but not a whole lot. I did, however, think briefly that
this just might be the big one because it did seem to last for a very long time.
They said it was less than 30 sec. with the 6.8 shaking only lasting 17, but in a
crisis when your brain goes into hyper mode that's a very long time.

I and a lot of other people were heading outside when the rumbling stopped. At
that point, I, like everyone else in the whole region, was trying to make a phone
call and I couldn't get through to anybody. I was mostly trying to call Kathryn
because she was home and her apt. is at the market 3 stories up and all of
downtown seattle up to like 3rd avenue is built on sand. Theres no bedrock under
there!

I called Kathryn's parents in chicago and managed to get ahold of them. They
had already heard from Kathryn and said she was all right and they said they would
call her and let her know I was ok. A couple hours later I was finally able to
call Kathryn and they sent me home at that point because several of the
computers that had fallen off the racks were servers and they had to rebuild a lot of
the computer racks and put stuff back together and since I'm hourly and not
salary, I was sent home.

I got to Kathryn's place and she had a lot of stuff that fell off of shelves,
she had two small candelabras that bounced off the table they were on and "flew"
across the room. There was also a very large mirror she owns that slid off a
large cabinet it was on and hit her table, which she was under, and almost took the
top of the table off. The mirror, miraculously, did not break. She also had some
glass and plastic bowls stacked up on one small shelf and they flew off the
shelf and skidded across the kitchen. One of the plastic bowls broke, but none of
the glass ones did, a bit strange that. She also had some pictures and some cd's
that fell down and the glass in a couple of the picture frames broke. She was
really scared, but she came out of it without injury and we were both happy that
we were both safe and ok.

The funny part about Kathryn's experience was that as soon as it started she
recognized it for what it was, grabbed her phone and headed under the table. She
sped-dialed my number as she was doing that and couldn't get through to me. She
got to the table and as she climbed under it, she dialed her parent's number and
they answered the phone. She shouted to them "I'm in an earthquake and it's
happening right now!! It's still happening...I'ts happening right now!!" It's kinda
funny looking back on it, but I can't imagine what her mom was thinking with her
daughter calling not after, but DURING the earthquake.


"So maybe you know ... is this true?"
Posted by Llevram on Mar-13-01 at 08:26 PM
Some shop had a pendulum over sand and this is supposed to be the designs it made while it went on. Since it came from the Internet, I am not sure how much I believe it to be true or not

http://www.gaelwolf.com/pendulum.html

Tools for your Wizardry(r) toolkit


"RE: So maybe you know ... is this true?"
Posted by myrddin on Mar-14-01 at 12:35 PM
Believe it or not, it is true!

I had heard about in a local paper, but they only had one picture, not the others on the site.

Very cool, I think.

-Myrddin