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Originally posted by dragonrider
No offence to anyone in Cali, but thats one state I just wont live in, for that very reason. Also, as much as I love KY and TN, I wouldnt live there, except maybe the far east end of the states.
Originally posted by observer
Holy MOLY Astrocreep, you MUST be either a Geology grad student at UK or a geology Prof at UK. Thanks for the info....it will take the History grad student from UL weeks to decifer though.
I glean that it might be safe to live in Anchorage but my part of town is a big question mark!
Originally posted by dragonrider
This is the only one I have on my list that is specific to the NMSZ. Most of my links are worldwide for quakes. If you find one, please let me know though!
Sorry its not the most user friendly of the bunch.
www.eas.slu.edu...
Originally posted by dragonrider
Astrocreep:
I am thinking you are working for a geotech consulting firm. I did that for more than a few years, and cut my teeth on geology while I was in school taking blow counts and calculating rock competencies. Keep it up, its not the most glamorous of jobs, but you are getting a good deal of experience!
(When I was training, went out with our senior geologist. I decided to have some fun with him. We were driving split spoons in deep native clay, and when i took the spoon off the hammer, I slipped a bottle cap in the end. When he popped the spoon open and found that, he spent an hour trying to decide if he was in fill or not )
Observer, as far as when a serious seismic event might take place in the New Madrid, who knows? It has been relatively quiet for almost 200 years, and quite frankly, that is what worries me.
In the San Andreas, it releases a good sized 6.0-7.0 every 10-20 years, and essentially blows most if not all the energy it has stored. Dont worry so much about a seismic zone if it is active on a regular basis, as that activity doesnt allow it to build up dangerous levels of energy. When a seismic zone is quiet for decades or centuries, it is building up enormous amounts of energy.
In addition, the New Madrid is composed of much more competent rocks than the San Andreas, meaning the rocks are much more solid, stronger, and capable of containing much higher energy levels. Consider that a quake doesnt occur until the stored energy exceeds the strength of the rocks.
Certainly, monitor the seismic activity there in the New Madrid. There are likely to be some foreshocks before a massive quake. However, when you look and find that the New Madrid regularly releases very small 3.0 shocks on a regular basis, it is hard to identify a true foreshock.