View Full Version : Stan Deyo's Earthquake Advisory
Hervé
27th January 2013, 07:18
IMPORTANT ADVISORY SAT. JAN 26: Between the 19th and the 23rd of January 2013, I posted Alerts for impending seismic activity all along the US West Coast region. In the last 7 days, the number of seismic events along the US West Coast has increased by 34% to 994, which is 254 more events than the average number of 740 per week. Thankfully it seems the seismic stresses along the coast allowed for a lot of smaller quakes rather than a small number of large quakes. However, I still advise being prepared for the next week.
http://standeyo.com/NEWS/13_Quake_4casts/13_Quake_4casts_pics/130125.Seismic_Map.jpg
Tesla_WTC_Solution
27th January 2013, 14:54
He is right, this is one of the things I watch on USGS -- and it looks like half of CA has shaken within the week (swarm - ish).
You are right that CA adjusts itself a lot via smaller quakes.
On the whole Ring of Fire, Seattle is the worst in terms of failing to relieve stress via small quakes,
because it sits on a Sea Basin (keeps stress locked in!).
The Juan de Fuca fault has been really worrying me a lot although CA looks hotter this year.
Juan de Fuca has a probability of 35-50 percent to produce a megaquake within 100 years.
baddbob
27th January 2013, 17:02
I have this as my home page http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/
Dick
27th January 2013, 17:41
This is also a good one: http://www.iris.edu/seismon/
ghostrider
27th January 2013, 19:28
I heard a good saying, information is shock resistance ... I always check the global incident map daily, when down by Tonga area is active in the am, the other side of that ocean rebounds with quakes ramping up on the west coast ... it works it's way around by japan like dominos ... hits the northern part of south america and rebounds again back the other way ... when you know, or have the information , when something happens it seems one will process it better because of the information already being processed in advance of the event ...I really can't explain it better , but all you brillant minds out there get what I'm saying even with my limited explanations ... seaquakes are very dangerous and not to be taken lightly ... I've noticed they are staying around 4.5 or bigger ...for some time now ...
Rocky_Shorz
27th January 2013, 19:50
and yet, this is the quietest 2 days I can remember...
http://static1.emsc-csem.org/Images/map_zoom/WEBMAPS/48H/TWORLD.48hours.jpg?dt=1345479395242
Wind
27th January 2013, 20:38
Something is going on. I can just feel it...
This UnitedKnowledge guy says that he expects at least a 8+ quake in the months to come. Why believe? Well, his track record proves it.
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Rocky_Shorz
27th January 2013, 21:00
well for some reason March is always an earthquake month, the dark energy waves roll through ruffling the feathers of our sun which blasts us with energy which charge the plates like a capacitor needing release...
for someone to say an 8 is coming, either they know the dark agenda are about to set off another nuke, or they're guessing...
or, they know by telling the gifted it will happen, they will create it...
I live in earthquake land, but never feel or worry about any of them...
quakes hit Japan so often, people don't even stop what they are doing any more, just glance around to see if anything will hit them when it falls...
now that fear is out of the way, I do want to say I love watching this guy too... ;)
Hervé
9th February 2013, 01:31
http://standeyo.com/NEWS/13_Quake_4casts/13_Quake_4casts_pics/130203.Stan.map_hits.jpg
http://standeyo.com/NEWS/13_Quake_4casts/legend.jpg
http://standeyo.com/NEWS/13_Quake_4casts/13_Quake_4casts_pics/130208.Seismic_Map.jpg
EXPLANATION
(http://standeyo.com/)This analysis shows areas of possible earthquake or volcanic activity, or extreme storm conditions for the next 1 to 10 days. Larger magnitude quakes often have a 10-day window while smaller events are usually 7 days at the outside. Pay particular attention to areas marked by red circles.
These circles indicate stresses in an area and warn of a probable quake in this location. The areas do not always convert to a quake. When a quake does occur and has been in or fairly close to the outer radius of a circle, I have drawn over a given fault zone area, then it is counted as a "hit". When stress signals go into a large land mass I have to estimate the radius of the circle and the vector to the nearest major fault on the land mass.
DEYO NOTES: For earthquake maps, see the Global Incident Live Earthquake Map (http://quakes.globalincidentmap.com/), USGS (http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/), Earthquake Mashup (http://www.oe-files.de/gmaps/eqmashup.html) or any other quake map of your choice. Additionally, these quake circles usually indicate events at Richter 4.0 and above. Smaller events, less than mag. 4's, are not picked up.
Hervé
15th March 2013, 00:28
Something is going on in that Indian Ocean: Strongest, biggest thermal gradient anomaly (mantle plume/hot-spot?) ever observed:
http://standeyo.com/NEWS/13_Quake_4casts/13_Quake_4casts_pics/130314.hotspots_animated.gif
http://standeyo.com/NEWS/13_Quake_4casts/13_Quake_4casts_pics/130314.N.Indian.Ocean_hotspots.jpg
http://standeyo.com/NEWS/13_Quake_4casts/13_Quake_4casts_pics/130313.Seismic_Map.jpg
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