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Decent shaking for several seconds here in North County, San Diego.
Two story wood framed house moved pretty good and pictures on the wall rocked too. |
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Raining here too.
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My kid just called me from Newport Beach, out there for Water Polo Junior Olympics this week, Said "Dad, this was so cool, the highlight of our trip, the whole building was shaking" Yea, he is lucky. He cant wait to get home now!
I told him when he left, you might get to feel an earth quake, well I guess he did! I Thought this one might be blamed one me!!:eek: |
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Nope, the whittier quake wasn't as big as i thought. it just felt like it:
The Whittier Narrows earthquake struck the southern San Gabriel Valley and surrounding communities of southern California at 7:42 a.m. (Pacific Daylight Time) on October 1, 1987. The magnitude 5.9 earthquake was originally assigned a magnitude of 6.0 but was revised a few days later when additional data became available. Its epicenter was actually in the town of Rosemead, California, at a depth of 11 km. The earthquake was caused by slip on a blind thrust fault near the northern end of the Whittier Fault, part of the Elsinore Fault Zone, on a previously unknown fault structure. There was no surface rupture. It has been proposed that the event occurred on an extension of the recently recognized Puente Hills thrust system.[1] A magnitude 5.3 strike-slip aftershock occurred three days later, on October 4, causing additional damage. Three people died as a direct result of the earthquake. One death was of a Southern California Edison worker buried by a landslide in the Muir Peak area of the San Gabriel Mountains while working with a crew installing the footings for a high tension power tower north of Pasadena, California. Five other deaths are attributed indirectly to the event. About $358 million USD in damage resulted.[2] |
I didn't feel a thing.
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It totally depends on where you are, and distance isn't necessarily the biggest factor - depends on the geology.
I was in marina del rey - 4th floor doctor's office and my ortho was filling a syringe to give me a shot when it happened. I'm amazed it was only 5.8 as it was a *long* roller - easily 30-45 seconds. I've been through a bunch of quakes here. The scariest being an aftershock of the Whittier Narrows quake in '89 that hit at about 3am (I was living in Pasadena), and then the '94. That one felt like it picked up the house and dropped it back down (again, in Pasadena). |
Good one here in Burbank.
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sister felt it in burbank, she was perrrty scared
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I was in the air and space gallery... imagine having an F-20 and a T-38 hanging on cables over your head. :eek:
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I saw the news on CNN at lunch just now. My first thought: "I wonder how quickly this will make it onto PPOT?"
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The wife was sitting at a signal and thought she was rear ended. She says car was rolling back and forth and side to side.. Our quakes are usually early morning I think
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Any of you guys remember Northridge, or even farther back Whittier-Narrows or Sylmar? Those were some shake and bakes. :eek:
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I think the sylmar quake was in 1972? I was 12 and I remember the bed moving all over the room. Pool had some pretty big waves too!
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Whittier narrows quake I was up a fixed ladder 30 ft off the floor inside a plastics plant working on a conveyor system. I about broke my thumb flying down that ladder. |
Not a single house in my neighborhood had a chimney after Northridge. And we weren't even in The Valley.
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I just called a neighbor who's in Florida right now. He thinks he likes earthquakes because the highest one he's been through is a 4.8. I told him when they get close to a 6 and it's nearby, he'll change his mind. |
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