earthquake

Jun 23, 2010 20:20

This afternoon I was in a meeting when someone else said the room was shaking. I hadn't noticed but did after she pointed it out. I figured it was a large truck rumbling by outside; she said it felt like an earthquake ("but smaller", I said). Who knew that a magnitude-5.0 earthquake on the border of Ontario and Quebec could be felt in Pittsburgh ( Read more... )

misc

Leave a comment

Comments 9

gardenfey June 24 2010, 10:12:03 UTC
I'm rather surprised that I didn't notice it.

Reply

cellio June 25 2010, 01:23:02 UTC
And you're a lot closer. I guess you were in a well-cushioned building.

Reply

gardenfey June 25 2010, 14:07:55 UTC
Either that, or I was more distracted (the kids are home from school this week). :)

Reply


mabfan June 24 2010, 14:16:29 UTC
The earthquake led to the evacuation of the building that houses our pediatrician's office, but neither of us felt it.

Reply

cellio June 25 2010, 01:24:12 UTC
That surprises me, but I guess in the moment you don't know whether it's a 4.0 right under you, a 5.0 a couple hundred miles away, or an 8.0 farther out but the impending shock wave is going to be a doozy.

Reply


merle_ June 24 2010, 19:19:14 UTC
I live a mile or so from the San Andreas fault, but am desensitized rather than sensitized. Many <4.0 quakes have happened quite nearby without me even noticing. Something in my brain just says "eh, small quake, nothing to see here, move along" and it doesn't register.

Not the best survival trait.

Reply

cellio June 25 2010, 01:25:16 UTC
Not the best survival trait.

True, but it helps you sleep through the night. :-)

Reply


chaos_wrangler June 25 2010, 00:44:08 UTC
The news here in NYC had interviews with people who had felt/seen it, but I didn't notice...

Reply

cellio June 25 2010, 01:26:18 UTC
I guess whether you feel it depends as much on the construction of the building you're in at the time as it does on distance.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up