Comments:7.0 magnitude earthquake strikes off Japanese coast

From Wikinews, the free news source you can write!
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Back to article

This page is for commentary on the news. If you wish to point out a problem in the article (e.g. factual error, etc), please use its regular collaboration page instead. Comments on this page do not need to adhere to the Neutral Point of View policy. Please remain on topic and avoid offensive or inflammatory comments where possible. Try thought-provoking, insightful, or controversial. Civil discussion and polite sparring make our comments pages a fun and friendly place. Please think of this when posting.

Use the "Start a new discussion" button just below to start a new discussion. If the button isn't there, wait a few seconds and click this link: Refresh.

Start a new discussion

Contents

Thread titleRepliesLast modified
Comments from feedback form - "Unrealiable"112:24, 2 April 2011
2 Pacific earthquakes?110:13, 1 March 2010

Comments from feedback form - "Unrealiable"

Unrealiable

121.203.66.30 (talk)12:15, 2 April 2011

2 Pacific earthquakes?

Ok, so Friday Japan has an earthquake, Saturday Chile has an earthquake.

I'm wondering why there's no articles pointing this out -- Have any scientists made note of this publicly? Any relation (I can see the plates are not adjacent, but who knows....)? I was briefly looking at the tectonic plates in the Chile article ( http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Pacific_Rim_braces_for_tsunami_following_major_Chilean_earthquake media gallery image 2). The Nazca plate hit the South American plate causing the Chilean earthquake -- the Nazca plate and South American plate BOTH seem to touch on the Carribean plate (note I'm no geologist...) which would probably be what caused the Haiti earthquake. Any relation there? I'm wondering if there's any chance of chain reactions going on with plates bumping into each other "faster" or "harder". They said the Nazca and South American plates are converging 80mm a year (http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/8.8_magnitude_earthquake_hits_Chile;_tsunami_warnings_issued_throughout_Pacific_rim). That seems mighty slow to me, but that's probably a lot of momentum for huge heavy plates of bedrock. When they knock into each other, or rub against each other, how much do they affect each others' momentum? Even a little could be a huge deal. Could we measure a change in momentum within just a couple months?

Pure musing and conjecture -- and a little worry. I need a geologist ;)

Crisses (talk)15:17, 28 February 2010

I am also curious about this. Is the level of tetonic activity higher than usual or are we just aware of it more because the quakes it is causing is leading to destruction of human life and habitat?

94.168.56.162 (talk)10:13, 1 March 2010