Originally posted by Xcathdra
reply to post by Mad Simian
The USGS track map shows seismic activity from Oklahoma all the way over to Tennessee. Anyone want to venture a guess as to what fault line the track
follows?
New Madrids.
agreed, this is what i posted a last month ago:
posted on 13-10-2011 @ 03:42 AM this post
Originally posted by ShortMemory
Originally posted by pointr97
has anyone looked at the US earthquakes lately.....there are a couple in odd places, such as the VA and CO/NM, that are almost spot on with the ones
from last month.....There are a bunch in the US that are odd, I have a few theories but will leave them for another time. The one in SC bothers me, we
just moved from there, and it is located right smack on the SRS nuc site.....Last location in the US that can weaponize material. That would not be
pretty.
earthquakes all round seem to be acting a little weird recently, not trying to fear monger..
id like to hear your theories!
Been watching it only due to the guys preaching about the new madrid fault going....When the big quake struck VA(what a month ago), everyone jumped
onto that whole nuc thing.....however, it was at the same latitude as the one in CO. As the pressure builds in a fault, it will send off waves that
will travel until it connects with a change in density. You see this a lot in california, little quakes that not on the actual fault but a good
distance away. These smaller mid-continent quakes are in locations that either do not have faults or have no history of activity. Yet they are on the
new madrid side of major geological change, ie east side of the rockies. I can't explain the VA quakes, they seem to be an abnormality of the theory.
However, during the last couple of months saw some minor quakes in OK on the east side of the arbuckle mountain range, where the sub-layers change
drastically and in Tenn, on the west side of the blue ridge. Then there is the constant small quakes around the mississippi basin around the same
latitude and depth (around 3 mi down). The topography of california is significantly different than that east of the rockies.....The energy is pretty
confined along the west coast with the mountains, but on the rest of the continent. I know this is a loose theory, but they feel like precursors to
something central. To support the theory, you can look at california (lots of quakes, only reason for using it), and all the quakes that are not on
the fault (or close there of) are at topographical changes (where the normal sub-strata meets the mountains). It is as the waves move out horizontally
until it hits a change in density and then like laser light refracts upwards. So these waves can travel a vast distance through similar topography and
not be felt, then when it hits that harder rock, it rebounds upwards and is felt by the sensors. There are many examples in physics to illustrate
this, but I think the ocean is the best......the energy travels along the water, but does not become evident until the depth changes and the waves
start to appear at the surface. Again, just a theory, but there are just some real strange similarities in the quakes on the east side of the rockies
and those east of the mississippi. You may now tear my theory apart....
edit on 6-11-2011 by pointr97 because: (no reason given)
edit on 6-11-2011 by pointr97 because: (no reason given)