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singyourwayhome wrote:Usually there's at least a little activity around Yellowstone
the Wasatch Front
It's not exactly a wise approach to ignore data. A small quake in an area that doesn't normally get quakes needs to be noted. Ignoring a 4-pt earthquake in Los Angeles is one thing, ignoring one in Oklahoma is another. No, I didn't say anything about the Second Coming, so don't go there.mingano wrote:Maybe. Then again I doubt the earth can go more than a few seconds without another < 1.0 quake somewhere.... and as they more and more recorders that are more and more sensitive at some point you just have to filter out everything below a specified floor.
I feel its necessary to let people know, if they don't already, the danger inherent in living along the Wasatch front. The possibility for damage is high when an earthquake does occur. And while I believe people's lives, through divine means, will be surprisingly spared, the damage to buildings, structures, and facilities will be nearly incomprehensible.
So, I often wonder if people have a plan in place on what they will do, and how they will get out of such a devastated area and resume their lives.
Messenger wrote:When I lived in Pleasant Grove I was an emergency preparedness coordinator for the ward I was in. It was a calling that I was not familiar with and I relied heavily on my Bishop who was a retired fireman. When I was set apart, the things that were said were very specific about preparing the ward for an earthquake. In fact, it was so specific, that he even mentioned the specific damage that would happen to the apartment complex that was in our ward. I then started looking into the Wasatch fault line and learned more about it. During the next year, I received spiritual confirmations and more specific information regarding the Wasatch Fault line. While this information was specifically for my calling, I feel its necessary to let people know, if they don't already, the danger inherent in living along the Wasatch front. The possibility for damage is high when an earthquake does occur. And while I believe people's lives, through divine means, will be surprisingly spared, the damage to buildings, structures, and facilities will be nearly incomprehensible.
So, I often wonder if people have a plan in place on what they will do, and how they will get out of such a devastated area and resume their lives.

HeirofNumenor wrote:back around 2004-5, Utah was preparing for an 7.3 quake along the Wasatch Front (strongest the experts felt we'd get). They retrofitted bridges, strengthened the Deer creek Dam NE of Provo, the State Capitol, etc....
Now I find out that that estimate has been revised upwards... Utah will likely get a quake somewhere in the low 8 point somethings....
BIG danger (aside from dams breaking, unreinforced brick houses), is the threat of liquefaction throughout the floors of Salt lake & Utah valleys....the quake causes the flats around the lake to turn to quicksand.... some being many miles away from the water....all those buildings fall down or sink into the earth...
HeirofNumenor wrote:Utah will likely get a quake somewhere in the low 8 point somethings....
HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK, Hawaii: A large number of earthquakes has been rattling the Volcano area on Hawaii Island over the last few days. The quakes have been small, with no damage reported. Still, a handful of those temblors have been 3.0 magnitude and over.
The USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory’s “Recent Earthquakes in Hawaii” page shows a constant swarm of quakes surrounding the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, home of the active Kilauea Volcano. We took a screen grab of the screen of the USGS HVO earthquake page, and it shows the long list stretching all the way back to Friday, June 1st.
16 earthquakes have already registered on the list before noon on Tuesday, Hawaii time.
On Tuesday, the HVO staff makes mention of the quakes on their Kilauea volcano update page:
The GPS network recorded weak extension overall for the past few months with superimposed contraction and extension fluctuations corresponding to DI tilt events. Seismic tremor levels were generally low, decreasing from a peak around 11 am Sunday. A whopping thirty-three earthquakes were strong enough to be located beneath Kilauea volcano: 4 deep earthquakes below the southwest rift zone, 3 beneath the west edge of the summit area, 7 within and below the upper east rift, 1 north of the middle east rift zone, 7 on south flank faults, and 11 mostly shallow long-period (LP) earthquakes within the Koa`e Fault Zone beneath the Kulanaokuaiki Camp Ground; a quick check this morning showed no obvious new cracking on the surface near the campground.
The rise of the Kilauea summit lava lake level in Halemaumau crater continued with several overflows of the inner ledge. At Pu`u `O`o, scientists report lava also rose within the east collapse pit; to the southeast, lava flows continued to advance on the coastal plain.
I'd guess that one of the biggest dangers is to all of those mansions up on the hilltops. Ostentatious displays of pride and arrogance, just ripe to fulfill prophecies of bringing the prideful low.
I just want to reiterate one point ... There is a huge potential for a mass exodus to leave the valley. Further, there will be challenges for the people who wish to leave. From a spiritual standpoint, there will no doubt be divine help for those that are leaving. But, if roads and freeways are impassable, how are people going to leave easily? Remember, nearly every freeway overpass has the potential for collapse. That's a lot of roadblocks to get out. Further, there is pretty good potential for Tooele Utah to escape the kind of damage that cities and towns along the Wasatch front may not. This is because a mountain stands between Tooele and the Wasatch Fault - and that mountain is not sitting on gravel. It may protect them from from some of the damage from the shockwave and rolling motion. Im not saying that everyone consider moving to Tooele ... but I would say that the current rescue workers there such as firemen and EMTs, and Police, will no doubt be called to help along the front. This will leave a vacuum of security there in Tooele.
Liquefaction is a huge potential problem in the Utah and SLC valleys. Further, there will be quite a downward drop as much as 6 feet where the valley meets up against the Wasatch mtn range. These two factors will certainly increase the damage potential from any kind of earthquake. In other words, what may look like a 7.5 or 7.8, may only be a 6.5 from a scientific measurement standpoint. Further, you can expect permanent flooding because the valley floor will drop by as much as 2 feet allowing water from the lake to encroach on the land. I was working in Sandy when the Nevada quake happened several years ago. It was my third earthquake that I have felt. I was working in the Comcast building near the Freeway on the third floor. The building was rolling 4-6 feet in a side to side motion for nearly 3 minutes. That all had to do with the alluvial material that everything is built on (gravel, sand and rocks). Think of it as very thick water on the ocean. That was a result of an earthquake nearly 100 miles away. Can you imagine what it would be like only 1 - 5 miles away?
HeirofNumenor wrote:unreinforced masonry on flats highly subject to liquefaction....as soon as we left them to go home - my bro-in-law was worried about the earthquake danger...no framing, nothing but brick stacked upon brick....
does Utah require HWHs and the like to be strapped like they do in California?
mingano wrote:HWH = hot water heater
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