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General Discussion>Find your faults
markem 02:45 PM 04-12-2011
as in seismic faults. Very interesting for both the extremely paranoid and the merely curious.

http://geohazards.usgs.gov/qfaults/map.php

My emergency response group is currently using this info to develop activation plans, since if an earthquake occurs, we probably shouldn't set up our radio stations on top of another fault :-)
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CRIMPS 02:51 PM 04-12-2011
I am pretty sure we are all going to die...
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markem 02:53 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by CRIMPS:
I am pretty sure we are all going to die...
Thought of that one all by yourself, huh? :-)
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CRIMPS 02:55 PM 04-12-2011
Ahh, no Alaska... I grew up in a house that was built at the bottom of a fault line. We were told, though we did question some, that the hill twenty feet from the side of the house rose another 10 feet during the 1964 earthquake. That was a little before my time. Our house was about 10 feet above sea level. So, our plan was to get to the top of the hill as fast as you could if there was an earthquake.

Luckily, we never had to put that plan in motion.
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bonjing 02:57 PM 04-12-2011
According to the girlfriend, it's all my fault.
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76GTFan 02:59 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by bonjing:
According to the girlfriend, it's all my fault.
wakawakawaka!
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bonjing 03:00 PM 04-12-2011
on a serious note, I didn't know there were so many faults in NV.
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DMK 03:02 PM 04-12-2011
I'm safe.... none up here in Canada....:-):-)
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awsmith4 03:08 PM 04-12-2011
I don't see any in my area but we felt a quake about 9 or 10 years ago so I am not sure where it came from
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E.J. 03:12 PM 04-12-2011
Yep, lots of faults on the Wasatch Front.... The big one is coming, just a matter of time.
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kaisersozei 03:13 PM 04-12-2011
Looks like Virginia has a small, recent (15,000 years old) fault zone between Richmond & Charlottesville. Probably responsible for the 4.5 mag earthquake we had a few years back.
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landhoney 03:23 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by CRIMPS:
I am pretty sure we are all going to die...
What About Bob :-)
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longknocker 03:25 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by DMK:
I'm safe.... none up here in Canada....:-):-)
I Don't See Any In Alabama!:-)
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markem 04:41 PM 04-12-2011
note that the listed faults are only those mapped by USGS or approved by USGS. I get the feeling that some other agencies/organizations may or may not share with the USGS and some the USGS may not accept data from, so your faults may vary.
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Skywalker 04:45 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by bonjing:
According to the girlfriend, it's all my fault.
And always will be!!!:-)

BTW - Yikes! I'm near the Chico Monocline!
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CigarNut 05:47 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by markem:
as in seismic faults. Very interesting for both the extremely paranoid and the merely curious.

http://geohazards.usgs.gov/qfaults/map.php

My emergency response group is currently using this info to develop activation plans, since if an earthquake occurs, we probably shouldn't set up our radio stations on top of another fault :-)
Looks like there is a fault about 1.5 miles from me... maybe 2 miles from you...

Thanks for the good news :-)
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68TriShield 06:21 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by markem:
we probably shouldn't set up our radio stations on top of another fault :-)
good plan :-)
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replicant_argent 07:18 PM 04-12-2011
I have no faults...


:-)




But you already knew that, I live in flyover country, and no one really cares.



Care to talk about my insecurities, though?
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markem 07:25 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by replicant_argent:
I
Care to talk about my insecurities, though?
stocks, bonds and annuities, that sort of thing?
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replicant_argent 07:27 PM 04-12-2011
Originally Posted by markem:
stocks, bonds and annuities, that sort of thing?
nah, I have some insoles slipping in my old man shoes.
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