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Having experienced a few very mild earthquakes I’m with Glenn. I’ll take tornadoes and hurricanes all day long. What a creepy and disorienting feeling.
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I was in SF in 1989, it was impressive
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earthquakes are awful.
but in general, CA is sorta prepared. our infrastructure is designed against catastrophic failure. it doesnt mean you wont get beaned in the head by a brick. but the new bridges wont disappear below your car. that's the plan. that said, it would still be a nightmare. most people i know, live "ready". i wont even let my truck fuel gauge drop below half. (till i get to AZ) |
I'm in North county San Diego ~ 20 years and just a few rumbles and shakes now and then so far... My understanding is that our location is on lots of bedrock and should a big one hit SA we will hopefully be somewhat protected. My home Santa Barbara likely not as much, but it's a stick home built in the '60s and has gone through several good sized quakes with no damage.
I was in Tokyo for the big quake, in the bus heading to Narita. We pulled out of the hotel entrance and at the first light in front of Starbucks it hit. I was stranded there for 24 hours...managed to find operating transport to Narita for the next day departure. Plane was at 10% capacity...most could not get there for the flight. Growing up in SoCal I have lived through a few memorable quakes. The Japan quake was very different. Many hours after the initial big hit the ground was still moving. We were stranded in the bus terminal (T-CAT) the night of and the coat hangers never stopped moving. I headed to a Japanese equivalent of 7-11 for some beer, sushi, and chips and made it a party in the middle of the terminal. I was not aware of the loss of life far North due to Tsunami...so sad. |
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When the big one comes, head to Barstow.
When I consulted for the DoD, I saw the maps. The USMC @ Nebo & Yermo have layouts for giant tent cities. The spot I staked out will be called Nebo Heights when I get there to my corner lot :) |
It has to suck real bad at home to ever WANT to go to Barstow. Maybe another garden spot like Boron, CA or Needles. For sure not the mental picture people think of when they think of California.
The good news for Barstow is it is the start of I-40 headed east out of there. |
LOL detail of faults under and around Barstow:
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1597257923.gif |
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Last year they had a 7 in Lone Pine which I felt here in LV..then there were literally hundreds of after shocks which I could feel a slight swaying in the house.
Go directly west of Lone Pine and see that that fault zone intersects the San Andreas just south of San Louis Obispo in the Coastal mountain range. |
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The white dots are sites of earthquakes of mag 3.0 or larger during a 10 year period. Not zackly stable http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1597262994.jpg |
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Tehachapi 1952. I think it was around 11 people killed that morning in town (pop. less than 2K). A few funny stories were told to my dad who was the manager of the Standard station at the main intersection in town. One: A guy came into his station a couple of days later with black eyes. Told my dad he slept on the outside of the bed with his wife. When the quake went off, he stood up in bed and jumped out right into the wall. The quake had walked the bed across the room so his side was near the wall. Two: Of course everyone was paniced to get out of their houses. Two neighbor couples ran out of their houses and were standing out in front. The men were standing together talking as were the wives. The men noticed the women snickering and looked at each other and realized they were both naked.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1597269458.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1597269480.jpg |
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It's a wooden house so doesn't crack like concrete. |
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That is a lot of dead people Bill, especially an earthquake in a sparsely populated area like that.
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If your TV is still working, the earthquake was in the desert or mountains.
No TV means L.A. region was epicenter I always turn off my house power, the Big bear quake in 95 had the neighborhood down to 70 volts. All of my neighbors had microwaves and TV's that were toasted. |
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