please keep both hands inside the car
Oct. 7th, 2006 08:37 pmI was sitting on the sofa in the living room, reading a book.
imtboo was in the bedroom, changing her clothes after a shower.
I heard a crick-crack sound from an outer wall and window, and felt the sofa shake a little bit, like a big truck had just pulled down the alley, fast.
"Did you feel that?" I asked D.
"Feel what?" she said. I decided it had probably just been somebody moving furniture downstairs, or dropping a box, or something.
A few minutes later,
beckyb called, and I mentioned what I had observed. She reminded me that there are professionals for this task.
Turns out it really did happen. (here's a plot, there at 02:48 UTC).
[Update Monday: that makes this quake slightly less powerful than the Korean artificial quake.]
I heard a crick-crack sound from an outer wall and window, and felt the sofa shake a little bit, like a big truck had just pulled down the alley, fast.
"Did you feel that?" I asked D.
"Feel what?" she said. I decided it had probably just been somebody moving furniture downstairs, or dropping a box, or something.
A few minutes later,
Turns out it really did happen. (here's a plot, there at 02:48 UTC).
[Update Monday: that makes this quake slightly less powerful than the Korean artificial quake.]
no subject
Date: 2006-10-08 09:49 pm (UTC)When I was in Redmond for the Nisqually quake in 2001, I was out in the parking lot before the shaking stopped, and the whole asphalt suburban parking lot was swelling like the surface of the ocean.
no subject
Date: 2006-10-09 05:21 pm (UTC)wow!
i've been both inside concrete cinder block buildings and outside for earthquakes and i'd liken them both to the bowl of jello in slow-mo. but both were in urban areas. i haven't ever felt one out in the campo.