Mystery
tremors puzzle experts
Not
confirmed earthquakes
5
December, 2012
Reports
of earthquake-like tremors starting Tuesday afternoon and continuing
until early Wednesday can’t be confirmed as true earthquakes, but
experts can’t say what it is, either.
“We
started getting calls at 3:09 p.m. (Tuesday),” said Eric Meyers,
Navarro County Emergency Coordinator. “The first calls were north
of Corsicana in the Hickory Hollow area with two separate residents
out there reporting unusual tremors being felt along with a rumbling
type of noise.”
After
checking with the U.S. Geological Survey website, Meyers also checked
with the National Weather Service and state emergency management
offices.
“About
two hours later, approximately five o’clock, there were additional
reports in the same area of heavier tremors, the same vicinity, the
same residents,” Meyers said. Another report came from the western
part of the county, near Navarro Mills.
After
the second round of reports, Meyers posted it on Facebook and
suddenly there were more reports, but coming from all over, including
Streetman, Purdon, Pursley and Dawson. Some of the reports came from
as far away as Freestone and Limestone counties. The line runs about
50 to 60 miles long, and the tremors didn’t act like any other
thing except perhaps earthquake booms, which are shallow sometimes
undetectable tremors similar to what’s been happening locally.
The
range and the description of houses “popping” and shaking didn’t
seem to fit anything, including the disturbances reported around
fracking drill-sites.
“This
is an unexplained event likely of a natural origin,” Meyers said.
“We can’t come up with a point of origin or a cause or
explanation of why this is happening.”
Still,
the National Earthquake Information Center, part of the U.S.
Geological Survey, located in Golden, Colo., didn’t see anything on
its monitors, according to Don Blakeman, an earthquake analyst at the
center.
“We
had a call earlier, apparently folks have been feeling something out
there for about a day, but we couldn’t find anything, we didn’t
see anything on our records,” Blakeman said. “That doesn’t mean
something hasn’t happened, but we don’t know what it is.”
If
the tremors had been as large as the small quakes that took place
around Dallas they would have been detected on their equipment,
Blakeman said.
“Little
earthquakes don’t automatically trigger the computer’s earthquake
location,” he said. “If we have an exact time, though, we can
scan the records for it.”
Many
tremors aren’t necessarily earthquakes but can have man-made
causes, both men said.
“We
were trying to determine what was going on, any type of military
exercises at a higher level than locally, we worked on this
throughout the night and we eliminated everything we could think of
and continued to do some through today,” Meyers said.
“We
went through the process of elimination on what it could be and ruled
out all these different things,” he said. “Whatever it was hasn’t
occurred since 4 a.m. Wednesday. It’s unusual, to say the least.”
"NATO
and the United States should change their policy because the time
when they dictate their conditions to the world has passed,"
Ahmadinejad said in a speech in Dushanbe, capital of the Central
Asian republic of Tajikistan
Mild
quake rattles BC north coast; latest in series of shocks
6
December, 2012
SANDSPIT,
B.C. - The latest in a string of earthquakes has rattled B.C.'s north
coast, but it appears this one caused barely a ripple.
The
West Coast-Alaska Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska, says the
quake had a magnitude of five and struck at 9:30 Wednesday night
about 45 kilometres southwest of Sandspit on Haida Gwaii.
There
are no reports of injury or damage and no risk of a tsunami.
Haida
Gwaii was rocked by a 7.7 magnitude quake Oct. 27th that briefly
triggered a tsunami alert for the B.C. coast.
Since
then there have been a series of aftershocks in the region, including
parts of the Gulf of Alaska, where one tremor measured 6.4 and
another six, but none of them caused any damage or resulted in
tsunamis.
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