View Full Version : Mi 6.5 STATE OF YAP, MICRONESIA
Magnitude Mi 6.5Region STATE OF YAP, MICRONESIADate time 2014-05-14 20:56:15.9 UTCLocation 6.19 N ; 144.80 EDepth 10 km
More... (http://www.emsc-csem.org/Earthquake/earthquake.php?id=378212)
Tesla_WTC_Solution
14th May 2014, 22:23
not sure that i've seen one in that spot in a few years! it's not on the normal fault lines lol
link (http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/#{%22feed%22%3A%221day_m25%22%2C%22search%22%3Anull%2C%22sort%22%3A%22newest%22%2C%22basemap%22%3A%2 2grayscale%22%2C%22autoUpdate%22%3Atrue%2C%22restrictListToMap%22%3Atrue%2C%22timeZone%22%3A%22local %22%2C%22mapposition%22%3A[[-45.70617928533083%2C60.46875]%2C[47.87214396888731%2C244.3359375]]%2C%22overlays%22%3A{%22plates%22%3Atrue}%2C%22viewModes%22%3A{%22list%22%3Atrue%2C%22map%22%3Atrue% 2C%22settings%22%3Afalse%2C%22help%22%3Afalse}})
who else thinks "shut yer YAP" jokes are really distasteful right now? how come i can't stop laughing.
ghostrider
14th May 2014, 23:25
that is a weird area to have that size quake ... Me wonders if the fukushima cores are tipping the scales underground ... from there , north to Japan , if quakes get deeper and stronger , look out , there could be a huge one on the way ... like a global game changer ...
Tesla_WTC_Solution
14th May 2014, 23:27
you know the Okhotsk sea? some anomalous deep quakes in that zone over last 2.
and this strange one, wasn't it shallow? (the one within 200 of "Yap")
the russian one was deep enough for seawater to hit the perovskite lol i think.
scary.
i agree w/ you Ghost that it's a super strange locale/size
'craton'? @@ verneshot? lol just joking
maybe a huge methane fart is about to come out like last year?
"pumice raft 10x size of RI"
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/93/Submarine_Eruption-numbers.svg/220px-Submarine_Eruption-numbers.svg.png
p.s. check this out:
Seamounts are abundant, and all have metal resource potential because of various enrichment processes during the seamount's life. Hydrogenic Iron-manganese, hydrothermal iron oxide, sulfide, sulfate, sulfur, hydrothermal manganese oxide, and phosphorite[30] (the latter especially in parts of Micronesia) are all mineral resources that are founded by various processes and deposited upon seamounts. However, only the first two have any potential of being targeted by mining in the next few decades.[29]
A seamount is a mountain rising from the ocean seafloor that does not reach to the water's surface (sea level), and thus is not an island.
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