A strong earthquake has struck New Zealand’s South Island, causing significant damage.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the quake’s epicenter was 20 miles northwest of Christchurch. With a population of 340,000, Christchurch is New Zealand’s third-largest city.
The 7.4-magnitude earthquake struck at 4:35 a.m. local time Saturday (11:35 a.m. Friday CDT) at a depth of 10 miles.
There were no immediate reports of injuries, butThe Pressnewspaper of Christchurch reported the earthquake had caused power outages and property damage, with rubble lying in the street in some places.
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NEWS RELEASE: Operation USA and Honeywell Break Ground on New School in Jacmel, Haiti
In Partnership with Operation USA, Honeywell Continues
Its Commitment to Haiti with On-Ground Support for Immediate and Long
Term Community Needs
JACMEL, HAITI, August 10, 2010 – Operation USA and Honeywell (NYSE:
HON) announced today the ground breaking for a public school, Ecole
Nationale Jacob Martin Henriquez in Jacmel, Haiti. In attendance were
Tom Buckmaster, President Honeywell Hometown Solutions, Richard Walden,
President and CEO of Operation USA, Jacmel Mayor Edwin Zenny and many
other local dignitaries representing the Department of Education.
Construction of the school, which will serve approximately 600 local
students in grades K through seven, is scheduled to be completed by
January 2011.
“Six months ago, Honeywell committed to contributing $1 million in
aid to the region, including a 100 percent match of employee donations,
to fund rebuilding projects in Haiti and we are on target with that
promise,” said Tom Buckmaster, President of Honeywell Hometown
Solutions, Honeywell’s Corporate Citizenship initiative. “With the
dedicated assistance of Mayor Edwin Zenny alongside relief agency
Operation USA, we’re confident that today’s ground breaking will help
support education and overall community resources. Honeywell has also
made business jets available to Operation USA for airlift support to
deliver medical supplies and transport medical staff. We are dedicated
to helping Haiti rebuild.”
Honeywell’s investment in this rebuilding project is two-fold.
First, the company is supporting the use of both contemporary and
sustainable building methods for the school that can withstand future
seismic disasters. Secondly, workshops will be held for local builders
to encourage their direct involvement in this build and the longer-term
rebuilding efforts in the region. These workshops will focus on
education around the latest in building standards and regulations while
considering environmentally-conscious construction options that can save
the region both money and natural resources over time.
Other aspects of the new school will help establish a sense of
community and normalcy to the region. A completely new computer lab
will be an integral part of the new site as well as a sustainable
community garden and regulation-sized athletic field that will host
community sports activities.
“Partners like Honeywell are invaluable in getting meaningful relief
work done,” said Richard Walden, President and CEO, Operation USA.
“Beyond financial assistance, we are thrilled to have a partner that is
involved in every aspect of this re-building effort. Honeywell brings
an unyielding commitment that ultimately will improve the Jacmel
community immeasurably.”
In addition to building the school, a scholarship fund has been
developed in partnership between Honeywell and Operation USA to help
support expenses the students may incur during the school year,
including mandatory school uniforms, books and supplies.
About Operation USA
Operation USA is an international relief agency that helps
communities at home and abroad overcome the effects of disasters,
disease and endemic poverty by providing privately-funded relief,
reconstruction and development aid. Since 1979, the Los Angeles-based
Operation USA has worked in 99 countries, delivering over $350 million
for relief and development projects. Operation USA is a co-recipient of
the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize as part of “The International Campaign to Ban
Landmines”; was named as one of Worth Magazine’s “100 Best Charities in
America”; and, in addition to their Four Star rating, was recently
named the “#1 Exclusively Privately Funded Charity” by watchdog group
Charity Navigator. Learn more and make secure donations at
www.opusa.org.Recent Earthquakes "Favorite Charity"
HAITI 7.0 - CHILE 8.8
TURKEY 6.0 - WHAT NEXT ?
An earthquake reminiscent of the 1960 Chile quake (largest ever recorded) struck the Pacific Ocean near the coast of Chile early this morning (Feb. 27) and US authorities warned it was of the type to generate a tsunami. The epicenter of the 8.8 tremor, which occurred at 3:34 am local time (0634 GMT), was 91 kilometers (56 miles) north northeast of the Chilean town of Concepcion and 110 kilometers southwest from Talca, also in Chile, according to the US Geological Survey.
There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage. The US Pacific Tsunami warning center issued a tsunami warning for Chile and Peru, and a tsunami watch for Ecuador. It is not yet known if a tsunami has been caused but "an earthquake of this size has the potential to generate a destructive tsunami that can strike coastlines within hours." Recent Earthquakes prays that won't occur...
The 1960 quake measured a 9.5 on
the Moment Magnitude (Mw) scale, but registered only an 8.5 on
the Ms scale. The temblor struck Concepcion, Chile late on Friday night according to the U.S. Geological Survey, which places the quake just as one of the largest ever.
To put it in a little bit of perspective, the 7.0 earthquake in Haiti had a seismic energy yield of 32 megatons, while this 8.8 earthquake measured more than 5.6 gigatons. In the history of measuring these quakes, only the 8.5 in Sumatra, Indonesia in 2007, a 9.2 that happened in Anchorage in 1964, a 9.5 in Chile during 1960, and a 9.0 in Portugal in 1755 have been this big.
We are still waiting for more information about what has happened in Chile, a Tsunami warning has been issued, and there is sure to be a lot of damage from this quake. We will update as we learn more information about what has occurred. There is a report that a Tsunami has also been spotted, but most of the damage was in Japan. Other areas were fortunate a major wave was not created.
Bobby Vassallo was working on a Tsunami Alert System in Tahiti when the alerts came. He witnessed the event first-hand. "Nothing much to see, but tides going out. Nobig waves coming in, thankfully. Area Islands got it worse, but Japan, most, says Vassallo."
The 9.5 magnitude earthquake that struck Chile back in 1960 killed a reported 1,655 people.
HAITI
Estimates of the numbers killed in the Haitian earthquake range
from 100,000 to 200,000. This is how events unfolded after the quake -
with a magnitude of 7.0 - struck at 1653 local time (2153 GMT) on
Tuesday, 12 January.
An 84-year-old woman and
21-year-old man were pulled out alive in Port-au-Prince, but with no
further signs of life reported the Haitian government declared the
rescue effort over at 1600 local time (2100 GMT).
Later a massive
benefit concert was broadcast to try to raise money for victims.
The
two-hour
Hope
for Haiti
telethon featured more than 100 Hollywood and music stars.
The
concert, which took place in New York, Los Angeles, London and Haiti,
included Bono, Bruce Springsteen, Sting, Rihanna, Brad Pitt, Clint
Eastwood, Julia Roberts and Leonardo DiCaprio.
The
International
Organisation for Migration,
distributing tents and plastic sheeting, warned that more permanent
shelter would soon be needed by the 500,000 people living outdoors.
In
a bid to deliver greater quantities of aid, the US military was
operating at four airports in the region - Port-au-Prince and Jacmel in
Haiti, and San Isidro and Barahona in the neighbouring Dominican
Republic.
The
US Coast
Guard
partially reopened the capital's main sea port which was damaged in the
quake. Four vessels had docked by Thursday evening.
WEDNESDAY 20 JANUARY
A
strong aftershock
rocked Haiti
, sending screaming people running into the streets. Some buildings
already weakened by last week's quake collapsed.
The magnitude
6.1 tremor struck west of Port-au-Prince at 0603 local time (1103 GMT).
The aftershock hit as people were still being found alive in the
rubble from the original quake. They included a five-year-old boy
reportedly pulled from the ruins of his home by his uncle. Earlier a
10-year-old girl and her eight-year-old brother were found.
More
than 120 people altogether have been rescued by international teams.
Many victims unable to find treatment in Haiti,
have crossed the border into the Dominican Republic. But the
BBC's Gary Duffy
says the volume of patients is so great the hospitals there are
struggling to cope.
Haitian officials said the death toll from
the quake was likely to be between 100,000 and 200,000, and that 75,000
bodies had already been buried in mass graves. An estimated 1.5 million
are homeless.
TUESDAY 19 JANUARY
The US presence in the country increased as Black Hawk helicopters
dropped scores of troops into the grounds of the ruined presidential
palace.
Captain Steve McInerney: "They do
rush the aircraft which can be expected"
The UN Security Council also voted unanimously to send a further
3,500 UN troops and police to Haiti, to maintain law and order.
Officials
said the general security situation was stable, but the BBC's Nick
Davis in Port-au-Prince said there were concerns that
looting and
violence
were a growing threat.
Meanwhile, doctors said they were having
to carry out
hundreds of
amputations,
with only basic medical equipment, because of the large numbers of
people suffering gangrene or traumatic injuries.
Search and rescue teams
received a boost when an apparently unharmed elderly woman, Ena Zizi,
was pulled from the rubble of the capital's Catholic cathedral, one of
90 people found alive in Haiti's ruins so far.
The
BBC's Christian
Fraser
said that while some markets on the road to Port-au-Prince were still
open, their supplies were running low and becoming increasingly
expensive.
MONDAY 18 JANUARY
The leading US general in Haiti
Lt Gen Ken Keen
said it was a "reasonable assumption" that up to 200,000 people might
have died in last Tuesday's earthquake.
UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon said he would recommend that the Security Council boost UN troop
numbers in Haiti by 2,000 for six months, and UN police numbers by
1,500.
Bill Clinton: "There's no question
it's not enough, not quick enough"
Meanwhile, almost a week after the earthquake
violence and
looting
have broken out in parts of Port-au-Prince. Police fired shots to
disperse looters in parts of the capital.
UN police fired baton
rounds to force a crowd back from the gates of the airport.
The
former American President
Bill Clinton,
who is in Haiti as a special UN representative, said that given the
circumstances, it was understandable that there had been some disorder.
Thousands
of people were fleeing the capital, Port-au-Prince, with many leaving
for the countryside in the hope of finding food and water.
The
BBC's Mark Doyle came across what is left of a poor community in the
hills above the capital, to find a group of people - their homes
destroyed - trying to heat up some food scraps in a pan of thin soup,
their only meal of the day.
SUNDAY 17 JANUARY
First reports from the epicentre of Tuesday's earthquake suggested
the damage was even more dramatic than in the capital.
BBC
correspondents said the scene in
Leogane
was "apocalyptic", with thousands left homeless and almost every
building destroyed.
The UN said up to 80-90% of buildings in
Leogane, about 19km (12 miles) west of Port-au-Prince, had been
destroyed.
The extent of the damage in Haiti's
villages
In the capital, survivors were becoming desperate as they waited for
aid being handed out by international agencies.
But in a sign of
hope, rescuers pulled a woman alive from the rubble.
"It's a
little miracle," the woman's husband, Reinhard Riedl, told the
Associated Press news agency after she was rescued from a luxury hotel.
The
Pan American Health Organization put the death toll at 50,000-100,000,
while Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said 100,000 "would seem a
minimum".
US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton
, the first senior overseas politician to arrive in Haiti, said the US
would be "here today, tomorrow and for the time ahead", asserting that
"Haiti can come back even better and stronger in the future".
SATURDAY 16 JANUARY
Desperation among survivors of the earthquake led to rising
fears over
security
in Port-au-Prince.
There were some reports of gangs preying on
residents and looting, and officials said thousands of prisoners were
unaccounted for after the main prison was destroyed.
Damage to the seaport, roads and other infrastructure still prevented
the speedy distribution of food, water and medical supplies. Relief was
arriving, but little had moved beyond the jammed airport.
A
spokeswoman for the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian
Affairs said aid workers were dealing with a disaster "like no other" in
UN memory because the country had been "decapitated".
Interior
Minister Paul Antoine Bien-Aime said 50,000 bodies had been collected,
but the total number of dead could be "between 100,000 and 200,000".
The
UN
launched an
appeal
for $562m (£346m) intended to help three million people for six months.
FRIDAY 15 JANUARY
Many spent another day without food and shelter in the ruined
capital.
The BBC's Andy Gallacher in Port-au-Prince said
survivors were dying in huge numbers, and clean water, food and medical
supplies were desperately needed.
Shaul Schwarz, a photographer for Time magazine, told the BBC he had
seen a roadblock formed with bodies of quake victims on a main road,
south of the capital.
He said he believed this was an "act of
anger" on the part of people who were not getting help.
Bottlenecks
and infrastructure damage were said to be holding up aid efforts - with
estimates of the number of dead put at as many as 45,000-50,000.
Dramatic
stories of
survival
began to emerge. UK firefighters pulled two-year-old Haitian girl Mia
from the rubble where she had been trapped for three days when her
kindergarten totally collapsed.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
told of one UN staff member found alive beneath the rubble of the
international body's collapsed headquarters in Port-au-Prince.
Estonian
protection officer Tarmo Joveer, Mr Ban said, was only found after
"scratching sounds" were heard and was kept alive by being "given water
through a rubber pipe".
THURSDAY 14 JANUARY
Thousands spent a
second night in
the open
after the earthquake, as the search for survivors under the rubble went
on after darkness.
The first US aid planes landed at the airport
serving the capital and US naval ships were on the way.
EU
states, Russia and China were among those sending rescue and medical
teams by plane while pledges of aid were made by countries around Latin
America.
The BBC's Andy Gallacher in Port-au-Prince said the situation in the
capital was increasingly desperate with no sense of a co-ordinated
rescue effort, scant medical supplies and aid only trickling in.
Efforts
to rescue survivors trapped in rubble were hampered by the lack of
heavy-lifting equipment and much of the work was being done by
individuals with simple tools or their hands.
Officials at the UN
said between 100 and 150 people from its 9,000-strong peacekeeping
mission in Haiti were still missing after the earthquake.
They
included UN mission head Hedi Annabi of Tunisia and his chief deputy,
Luis Carlos da Costa.
Haitian President Rene Preval spoke of how
he stepped over dead bodies and heard cries of those trapped in the
parliament building.
WEDNESDAY 13 JANUARY
As dawn broke, the extent of the damage and the number of casualties
started to become clearer.
The Red Cross said up to three million
people had been affected. Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said he
believed
more than 100,000
people had died
.
Describing the earthquake as a "catastrophe", Haiti's envoy to
the US said the cost of the damage could run into billions of dollars.
Haitian President Rene Preval described the scene in the capital as
"unimaginable".
"Parliament has collapsed. The tax office has
collapsed. Schools have collapsed. Hospitals have collapsed," he said.
Speaking
in Washington, US President Barack Obama vowed "unwavering support" for
Haiti after what he called a "cruel and incomprehensible" disaster.
UN
officials said at least 14 people had died when the UN's five-storey
headquarters and two smaller buildings in Port-au-Prince collapsed.
Around 100 were still thought to be missing, many feared to be under the
rubble.
People in the capital were lifting sheets on bodies to
try to identify loved ones.
TUESDAY 12 JANUARY
The quake - Haiti's worst in two centuries -
struck at 1653
(2153 GMT)
. Phone lines to the country failed shortly afterwards. The US
Geological Survey said its epicentre was 15km (10 miles) south-west of
Port-au-Prince, and that it was quickly followed by two strong
aftershocks of 5.9 and 5.5 magnitude. The extent of the devastation was
initially unclear.
In a statement issued in New York, the UN said
that its local HQ in Haiti had "sustained serious damage along with
other UN installations" and "a large number" of personnel were missing.
Rachmani Domersant, an operations manager with the Food for the Poor
charity, told Reuters: "You have thousands of people sitting in the
streets with nowhere to go. There are people running, crying,
screaming."
Bodies white with dust could be seen piled on the
back of a pick-up truck as vehicles tried to ferry the injured to
hospital.
In the minutes after the quake, Henry Bahn, a visiting
official from the US Department of Agriculture, said he had seen houses
which had tumbled into a ravine.
"Everybody is just totally,
totally freaked out and shaken," said Mr Bahn, who described the sky as
"just grey with dust".
UC Berkeley study ties 2004 Sumatra quake to California temblors of Oct. 2009
Researchers analyzed 20 years of data in the Parkfield area and found that the 2004 earthquake weakened the San Andreas fault, changing the frequency and strength of quakes in the area.
The 2004 Sumatra earthquake that set off a deadly tsunami also seems to have caused more earthquakes along the San Andreas fault in the last few years, according to a study from UC Berkeley.
The study analyzed 20 years of data in the Parkfield area, which sits on the fault, and found that the disastrous earthquake weakened the fault, changing both the frequency and strength of earthquakes in the area.
"So you will have many earthquakes, but the magnitude will be smaller than expected," said Taka'aki Taira, a seismologist at UC Berkeley who headed the study.
Similar small earthquakes followed the 1992 Landers earthquake in San Bernardino County, the study found.
David Shelly, a seismologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, said the study's conclusions are speculative. "The effects from the Sumatra earthquake are fairly subtle and it's not entirely clear how widespread it might be," he said.
Taira acknowledged that the study's scope is limited and researchers are continuing to look at more data. Whether the Sumatra quake affected other parts of the world, he said, is "still an open question."
Southern California -- A recent earthquake in Valencia, CA
August 17, 2009 | 10:37pm
A magnitude 2.6 earthquake was recorded tonight three miles southwest of Valencia; it caused no apparent damages or injuries, authorities said. The quake, about 5 miles southwest of Saugus, struck at 10:12 p.m., according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department station in Santa Clarita said there were no reports of damage or injuries.
Earlier, in March (March 21, 2009), an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone. Bobby Vassallo says this constant increase in activity is a warning to prepare!
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html. On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html.On Saturday, March 21, 2009, an earthquake swarm began near Bombay Beach, near the southern end of the San Andreas fault on the eastern side of the Salton Sea in southern California. Within the first week of the swarm, over 350 earthquakes were recorded, the largest of which was a magnitude 4.8 event that occurred on March 24 at 4:55 AM PST. It was felt by over 400 people within the San Diego region. The M4.8 moment tensor solution displays strike-slip motion, with the preferred nodal plane strike of N57E. This solution is consistent with a fault or faults orthogonal to the San Andreas fault, located in the northern Brawley Seismic Zone.
The NNW-trending Brawley Seismic Zone overlies an inferred short spreading center segment between the San Andreas and Imperial (transform) faults in the southern Salton Trough. Precisely relocated seismicity in this zone indicates that it consists of a series of left-stepping, left-lateral faults. From 1932 to 2008, 722 events were recorded within a 5-km radius of this current swarm. Prior to this sequence, the largest event recorded in this region was M4.2 on 11/13/99, which was triggered by the Hector Mine earthquake on 10/16/1999. For more information, visit www.scsn.org/2009bombaybeach.html. Bobby Vassallo has been predicting a big earthquake here for over a year, and it finally came in the form of the big recent earthquake at Mexicali.
The earthquake facilities are a key part of the China's three-part system to improve monitoring and warning capacity through land, sea and air observations, said Zou Ming, director of the disaster relief department of the Ministry of Civil Affairs.
Zou said the ministry has strengthened disaster contingency and preparedness measures, revised the National Natural Disaster Rescue Contingency Plan, drafted the country's first disaster rescue regulation and ordered its implementation at various levels, including communities.
"Disaster reduction lies in the community," Zou said. The recent earthquakes prove that "only by improving capacity at the community level can the effect of disaster be reduced."
On June 1, the ministry will launch a county-level disaster loss calculation software system and enhance the rescue material reserve system.
The ministry is training 300,000 disaster information officers at grassroots levels in two or three years, with pilot projects in 13 provinces this year, Zou said.
Bobby Vassallo - La Jolla, CA -asks that you and your family prepare. There is a 100% chance of an earthquake today. Recent earthquakes prove it. Earthquake Preparedness is the only answer. The big one is coming...