gimmee odds
Correspondent:: "nu-monet v7.0"
Date: Sun, 26 Dec 2004 13:42:18 -0700
--------
You'll note that about 5-6 days ago, there
was a major earthquake between Tazmania and
Antarctica.
Now this one.
So what are the odds that there is going to
be another one triggered somewhere along the
west coast of North or South America in two
to seven days?
It could be California's "Big One" along the
San Andreas, or the E-W Palm Springs fault;
it could be up in Alaska, which is due an
s-load of major quakes; or maybe down in
Chile.
Gimmee odds. Gotta be at least a 7 to qualify.
--
Herring communicate with each other
via a high-pitched, "raspberry"-like
sound emitted from their anuses.
These noises are not produced by
digestive gases.
-- from 'The New Scientist'
Correspondent:: König Prüß, GfbAEV
Date: Sun, 26 Dec 2004 20:53:33 GMT
--------
"nu-monet v7.0" wrote:
> You'll note that about 5-6 days ago, there
> was a major earthquake between Tazmania and
> Antarctica.
>
> Now this one.
>
> So what are the odds that there is going to
> be another one triggered somewhere along the
> west coast of North or South America in two
> to seven days?
>
> It could be California's "Big One" along the
> San Andreas, or the E-W Palm Springs fault;
> it could be up in Alaska, which is due an
> s-load of major quakes; or maybe down in
> Chile.
>
> Gimmee odds. Gotta be at least a 7 to qualify.
>
I saw 68% probability, but that's less than 7:1
I think that it's 8:5 that a big hole will open up
in the ocean and all of the water will drain out.
Correspondent:: asscoassc@aol.comBLOWME (AssCo Assc)
Date: 26 Dec 2004 21:13:05 GMT
--------
nu-monet:
<< So what are the odds that there is going to
be another one triggered somewhere along the
west coast of North or South America in two
to seven days?
It could be California's "Big One" along the
San Andreas, or the E-W Palm Springs fault;
it could be up in Alaska, which is due an
s-load of major quakes; or maybe down in
Chile.
Gimmee odds. Gotta be at least a 7 to qualify. >>
I would say the odds are pretty low due to the
Marianas trench bufferzone that separates
the Java trench-to-Marianas trench tectonic matrix
(which would include the Himilayan/Tibetian
plateau of sliding landmasses and curls around
Australia) from this hemisphere.
If this activity DOES somehow spread to the
western Americas that quickly than the odds
are pretty good that we'll have the entire earth
split into two or more parts held together only
by the gravitational force of such large objects
and the oceans will drain into the magna causing
severe disruption to the climate and then we'd be
better off moving to Venus and learning how to
breathe ammonia.
That's my guess.
ooOOoo
It petrifies the tongue. . .
Shoots arrows through the lung. . .
Guttural rending pain . . .
. . . and next it Sclerotifies the brain
-- Copyright 2004 Ilya Shambat
Correspondent:: HellPope Huey
Date: Wed, 29 Dec 2004 05:43:44 GMT
--------
In article <20041226161305.06333.00002200@mb-m18.aol.com>,
asscoassc@aol.comBLOWME (AssCo Assc) wrote:
> If this activity DOES somehow spread to the
> western Americas that quickly than the odds
> are pretty good that we'll have the entire earth
> split into two or more parts held together only
> by the gravitational force of such large objects
> and the oceans will drain into the magna causing
> severe disruption to the climate and then we'd be
> better off moving to Venus and learning how to
> breathe ammonia.
> > That's my guess.
Boy, YOUR Xmas cheer sure went down the toilet in jig time, didn't it?
Bend over and take your magma like a MAN, ya wimps.
--
HellPope Huey
That's one hell of a pickle,
Connie said to the beefy butcher.
"Who's that?"
"Oh, you wouldn't know them darling;
they're respectable."
- "After the Thin Man"
"How DARE you interfere with my literary posturing
and sully it with points of style???
The worst part is, you are correct. F**K you, sir."
- H. P. Huey
Correspondent:: Reverend Kenny <5ubg3n1u5@comcast.no.spam>
Date: Sun, 26 Dec 2004 16:20:35 -0500
--------
nu-monet v7.0 wrote:
> You'll note that about 5-6 days ago, there
> was a major earthquake between Tazmania and
> Antarctica.
>
> Now this one.
>
> So what are the odds that there is going to
> be another one triggered somewhere along the
> west coast of North or South America in two
> to seven days?
>
> It could be California's "Big One" along the
> San Andreas, or the E-W Palm Springs fault;
> it could be up in Alaska, which is due an
> s-load of major quakes; or maybe down in
> Chile.
>
> Gimmee odds. Gotta be at least a 7 to qualify.
>
>
Tough to say but you guys may be on to something... I found the global
seismic monitoring systems here:
http://www.iris.edu/seismon/
There was current activity on it as I pulled it up!
--
Illuminations,
Reverend Kenny
The most exciting phrase to hear in science,
the one that heralds new discoveries,
is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'
-Isaac Asimov
Correspondent:: nikolai kingsley
Date: Wed, 29 Dec 2004 02:20:36 +1100
--------
> It could be California's "Big One" along the
> San Andreas, or the E-W Palm Springs fault;
> it could be up in Alaska, which is due an
> s-load of major quakes; or maybe down in
> Chile.
if america does slide into the ocean in imitation of long-lost Atlantis,
then let me take this opportunity to say good-bye, thanks for all the
half-way decent TV, music and films, and also fuck you for cancelling
Firefly.
Correspondent:: "just john"
Date: 28 Dec 2004 07:34:23 -0800
--------
nikolai kingsley intoned:
> if america does slide into the ocean in imitation of long-lost
> Atlantis, then let me take this opportunity to say good-bye,
> thanks for all the half-way decent TV, music and films, and also
> fuck you for cancelling Firefly.
"Whedon, beloooooow the ocean, where I want to be, she may be
..."
--
* Radio Free Entropy: http://just-john.com/cn/rfe.shtml *