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4.3 171km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 10:10:27 52.482°N 132.248°W 10.3
4.3 123km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 10:04:37 52.924°N 132.395°W 10.3
4.1 127km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 09:52:58 52.892°N 131.733°W 10.0
4.4 127km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 09:45:39 52.886°N 132.392°W 10.2
4.4 221km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 09:41:16 52.029°N 132.187°W 10.0
4.6 196km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 09:36:36 52.258°N 132.343°W 10.3
4.4 178km SSE of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 09:22:49 52.467°N 131.439°W 10.7
5.3 206km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 09:17:27 52.159°N 132.149°W 10.2
4.2 215km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 09:15:48 52.102°N 131.653°W 10.0
4.5 208km SW of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 08:47:58 52.901°N 134.629°W 10.0
4.3 216km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 08:22:04 52.066°N 132.073°W 10.0
5.0 198km SSE of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 07:25:22 52.270°N 131.493°W 10.6
4.9 140km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 07:16:37 52.775°N 132.456°W 11.3
4.6 212km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 07:12:14 52.109°N 132.221°W 10.0
4.4 231km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 07:02:19 51.941°N 131.836°W 10.8
5.0 203km SSE of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 06:16:53 52.268°N 131.212°W 11.5
4.5 139km SSW of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 05:51:17 52.815°N 132.714°W 10.3
4.2 181km SSE of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 05:47:08 52.429°N 131.451°W 10.1
4.1 248km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 05:38:38 51.786°N 132.312°W 10.1
4.3 211km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 05:21:36 52.139°N 131.571°W 10.0
4.3 169km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 05:15:12 52.499°N 132.222°W 10.1
4.5 178km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 05:02:49 52.409°N 132.165°W 10.3
4.3 180km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 04:54:46 52.403°N 132.439°W 10.1
4.7 162km SSW of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 04:41:05 52.592°N 132.670°W 10.0
4.6 140km SSW of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 04:33:51 52.906°N 133.120°W 10.0
5.1 237km SSW of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 04:25:17 52.019°N 133.370°W 10.1
4.8 202km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 03:52:24 52.199°N 131.986°W 10.9
7.7 139km S of Masset, Canada 2012-10-28 03:04:10 52.769°N 131.927°W 17.5
For live coverage of Dragon’s release and return from the space station today, visit www.spacex.com/webcast spaceX webcastand follow @SpaceX on Twitter. Release from the station’s robotic arm currently targeted for 6:26AM PT, and splashdown planned for approximately 12:20PM PT. Look for NASA TV live video coverage through Dragon’s release, and real-time text updates through splashdo
Originally posted by ascension211
Listen up people. I have been watching Earthquake patterns and this is highly unusual. Period. After shocks, yes they happen, but this many at this magnitude in this short a period. No. I have not seen that with any other Earthquakes in the last year.
this earthquake seem very violent in terms of how many shocks.
Originally posted by ascension211
Listen up people. I have been watching Earthquake patterns and this is highly unusual. Period. After shocks, yes they happen, but this many at this magnitude in this short a period. No. I have not seen that with any other Earthquakes in the last year.
Originally posted by KhufuKeplerTriangle
this earthquake seem very violent in terms of how many shocks.
Originally posted by ascension211
Listen up people. I have been watching Earthquake patterns and this is highly unusual. Period. After shocks, yes they happen, but this many at this magnitude in this short a period. No. I have not seen that with any other Earthquakes in the last year.
have not seen one like this since Japan
Originally posted by ascension211
reply to post by violet
Read what I wrote! Wow.
reply to post by violet
An aftershock is a smaller earthquake that occurs after a previous large earthquake, in the same area of the main shock. If an aftershock is larger than the main shock, the aftershock is redesignated as the main shock and the original main shock is redesignated as a foreshock. Aftershocks are formed as the crust around the displaced fault plane adjusts to the effects of the main shock.
Originally posted by ascension211
reply to post by violet
An aftershock is a smaller earthquake that occurs after a previous large earthquake, in the same area of the main shock. If an aftershock is larger than the main shock, the aftershock is redesignated as the main shock and the original main shock is redesignated as a foreshock. Aftershocks are formed as the crust around the displaced fault plane adjusts to the effects of the main shock.
Earthquake swarms are events where a local area experiences sequences of many earthquakes striking in a relatively short period of time. The length of time used to define the swarm itself varies, but the United States Geological Survey points out that an event may be on the order of days, weeks, or months.[1] They are differentiated from earthquakes succeeded by a series of aftershocks by the observation that no single earthquake in the sequence is obviously the main shock. Earthquake swarms are one of the events typically preceding eruptions of volcanoes.
that no single earthquake in the sequence is obviously the main shock
Originally posted by ascension211
Listen up people. I have been watching Earthquake patterns and this is highly unusual. Period. After shocks, yes they happen, but this many at this magnitude in this short a period. No. I have not seen that with any other Earthquakes in the last year.