Re: mehere Beobachtungen zu jüngsten Beben - und Fudjiyama
Geschrieben von mica am 01. Oktober 2003 09:21:57:
Als Antwort auf: Erdbeben der Stärke 8 in Sibirien geschrieben von Zwobbel am 01. Oktober 2003 08:57:13:
Hallo,
um nicht einen neuen Thread anzufangen hier einige Beobachtungen(aus GLP-Forum) zur jüngsten Bebenhäufigkeit:
ScienceOnly
10/1/2003
1:23 am EDT
Re: Earth Changes: Ok, it´s time to panicStats over 7 days:
01 quakes, 8.x, annualized ***, avg 0001 annually
02 quakes, 7.x, annualized 0104, avg 0017 annually
07 quakes, 6.x, annualized 0364, avg 0134 annually
32 quakes, 5.x, annualized 1664, avg 1319 annually...and not all are cagalogued yet...especially 5.x quakes in the last few days...we haven´t lived through day 7 yet!
websalot
10/1/2003
1:24 am EDT
Re: Earth Changes: Ok, it´s time to panicI have been watching this building up for a bout a week or more. And its time for someone to notice that this is different.
I made my first posts here tonight because I have always been interested in quacks and the causes and I have never seen this activity in the couple of years that I have seen siesmic data.
no one
10/1/2003
1:24 am EDTWhat in the fuck is happening to Mount Rainier? OMG!
http://www.ess.washington.edu/SEIS/PNSN/WEBICORDER/GREEN/LON_EHZ_UW.2003100100.html
Vianova
10/1/2003
1:33 am EDT
Wild stuff, I remember other swarms in the last year as well, but this is a stronger pattern.I suspect that these quake swarms come in waves over time picking up in frequency, and the waves are getting bigger each time.ScienceOnly
10/1/2003
2:10 am EDTTo AC´s looking at Rainier,
This graph:
http://www.ess.washington.edu/SEIS/PNSN/WEBICORDER/GREEN/FMW_EHZ_UW.2003100100.html
is no doubt picking up the 6.7 in southwestern Siberia.
Why not check out the graphs for the times when other big quakes hit southwestern Siberia? ...and report the findings...I have no links to historical seismograph readouts of Mt. Rainer.
Und noch eins Drauf über Fudjiyama:http://www.volcanolive.com/volcanolive.html
Saturday 27th September 2003
Japanese seismologists said on Friday they had detected faint streams of steam rising from Mount Fuji. Very weak steam has been detected from three small vents at about the middle level of the mountain´s northeastern side in the past five days. Two of the holes were found in a small area of subsidence, 15 meters (50 feet) by 10 metres and up to 30 centimetres deep. There were also three smaller patches of subsidence in the area. The Meteorological Agency will continue to monitor temperatures around the vents. The event is unrelated to the magnitude 8 earthquake which hit northern Japan yesterday.
The 3776 metre high Mount Fuji, last erupted in 1707 and has been under scrutiny since 2000 when low-frequency tremors started to be felt there, confirming that the mountain is still an active volcano.
Hier noch USGS Live:
http://aslwww.cr.usgs.gov/Seismic_Data/heli2.shtmlGruß
mica