Friday, September 08, 2017

8.187km SW of Pijijiapan, Mexico

Significant Earthquakes, Past 30 Days

  1. 8.187km SW of Pijijiapan, Mexico
    2017-09-08 04:49:21 UTC69.7 km
  2. 6.322km ENE of Sungjibaegam, North Korea
    2017-09-03 03:30:01 UTC0.0 km
  3. 5.314km E of Soda Springs, Idaho
    2017-09-02 23:56:52 UTC6.5 km
  4. 6.372km NE of Muara Siberut, Indonesia
    2017-08-31 17:06:55 UTC45.1 km
  5. 6.4107km NE of Lorengau, Papua New Guinea
    2017-08-27 04:17:50 UTC8.1 km
  6. 6.4254km SE of Lambasa, Fiji
    2017-08-19 02:00:52 UTC544.0 km
  7. 6.6North of Ascension Island
    2017-08-18 02:59:21 UTC10.0 km
  8. 6.471km W of Bengkulu, Indonesia
    2017-08-13 03:08:10 UTC31.0 km
  9. 6.22km E of Prinza, Philippines
    2017-08-11 05:28:25 UTC172.0 km
A good place to start any discussion about earthquakes is when you have the attention they deserve,

We have not has a significant earthquake for some time and in fact I had believed that we would not have one during a significant hurricane. I suppose I am sticking my neck out here but that is a job I have appointed to me.

Seiches developed by earthquakes occur all the time and are how god patrols things at the moment. I have no doubt that he is going to permit us to engage in geo-engineering when we have proved trustworthy. How else are we supposed to extend the garden?

Anyway I had noticed that with the cycle being so strongly volcanic that things seismic had produced significantly less powerful earthquakes than I had been expecting, thus I had come to assume that volcanic activity was responsible for their amelioration.

Mea culpa.

And that is about it so far, I'm up to date. So now that we are in a spell of large earthquakes in Mexico (that is we should be in a spell of larger earthquakes than we are seeing? I think that we may be getting another Mag 7-plus somewhere else) we should be looking for a reaction in the Atlantic and possibly Pacific.

And then we can begin awaiting developments. Initially before the next set of storms begins we will see some significant 5.5 or so magnitude in the Antarctic region.

And then we all go around again.

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