Earthquakes
2013-09-24 11:29:48 UTC
2013-09-24 16:29:48 UTC+05:00 at epicenter
Location:
27.000°N 65.514°E depth=20.0km (12.4mi)
Nearby Cities:
66km (41mi) NNE of Awaran, Pakistan
116km (72mi) NW of Bela, Pakistan
172km (107mi) NW of Uthal, Pakistan
175km (109mi) S of Kharan, Pakistan
791km (492mi) ENE of Muscat, Oman
Technical data
2013-09-21 01:39:14 UTC
2013-09-21 09:39:14 UTC+08:00 at epicenter
Location
7.264°S 119.961°E depth=536.8km (333.6mi)
Nearby Cities
119km (74mi) NNW of Nggilat, Indonesia
136km (85mi) N of Labuhanbajo, Indonesia
159km (99mi) NNW of Ruteng, Indonesia
191km (119mi) NE of Bima, Indonesia
635km (395mi) WNW of Dili, East Timor
Technical Details

The green fireball that turned night into day over Ferrara, Italy on September 3rd 2013, the second major fireball to explode over Italy in a week.
This series include strange phenomena of all kinds and awesome natural events or beautiful phenomena in 2013. Enjoy my editing!
You can find all my other videos for the collective awakening on my channel 2013MESSAGE.
This is an educational/teaching and research purposes only video.
This application is not commercial and is free to use.
Music
1) Pip John - Dante's Riddle
2) How To Dress Well-Take It On (Holy Other Remix)
3) Sun Glitters - The Wind Caresses Her Hair
The U.S. Geological Survey says the quake struck early Friday at a depth of about 13 miles (22 kilometers) under Fukushima Prefecture and about 110 miles (177 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center did not issue an alert.
The Japanese news agency Kyodo News reported that the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., observed no abnormality in radiation or equipment after the quake.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Thursday ordered TEPCO to scrap all six reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant and concentrate on tackling pressing issues like leaks of radioactive water.
The 2011 disaster caused three reactors to melt and damaged a fuel cooling pool at another. Officials have acknowledged that radiation-contaminated groundwater has been seeping into the Pacific Ocean since soon after the meltdowns.
The region lies on the "Ring of Fire" - an arc of earthquake and volcanic zones that stretches around the Pacific Rim. About 90 percent of the world's quakes occur in the region.

Recent earthquakes near the Sea of Okhotsk in Russia, including one of the deepest ever recorded.
The magnitude-8.3 earthquake occurred on May 24, 2013, in the Sea of Okhotsk, deep within the Earth's mantle. The earthquake, described today (Sept. 19) in the journal Science, is perplexing because seismologists don't understand how massive earthquakes can happen at such depths.
"It's the biggest event we've ever seen," said study co-author Thorne Lay, a seismologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. "It looks so similar to shallow events, even though it's got 600 kilometers of rock on top of it. It's hard to understand how such an earthquake occurs at all under such huge pressure."
"By poisoning carcasses, poachers hope to eradicate vultures from an area where they operate and thereby escape detection," explains Leo Niskanen, Technical Coordinator, IUCN Conservation Areas and Species Diversity Programme. "The fact that incidents such as these can be linked to the rampant poaching of elephants in Africa is a serious concern. Similar incidents have been recorded in Tanzania, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Botswana and Zambia in recent years".
African vultures are highly imperiled, and are under pressure from a range of factors, including habitat loss as well as poisonings. Drastic population declines over the last 30 years have resulted in many species being classified as threatened by the IUCN. On average, the number of vultures in West Africa has dropped by 42% during this time, with Rueppell's vulture (Gyps rueppellii) suffering losses of up to 85%.
2013-09-15 16:21:37 UTC
2013-09-15 04:21:37 UTC-12:00 at epicenter
Location
51.540°N 174.794°W depth=22.8km (14.2mi)
Nearby Cities
83km (52mi) SSW of Atka, Alaska
1537km (955mi) SSE of Anadyr', Russia
1809km (1124mi) E of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy, Russia
1825km (1134mi) E of Yelizovo, Russia
2623km (1630mi) W of Whitehorse, CanadaTechnical Data

A model predicted the tsunami wave height from a Jan. 8, 1817, earthquake offshore South Carolina. The earthquake's magnitude was estimated at 7.4 from newspaper accounts.
The study links the tsunami to a known Jan. 8, 1817, earthquake. The temblor shook the East Coast from Virginia south to Georgia, where the seismic waves made the State House bell ring several times.
Based on archival accounts of the 1817 shaking, geologists had gauged the quake's size at magnitude 4.8 to magnitude 6. Now, with new geologic detective work and computer modeling of the tsunami, researchers have considerably revised the earthquake's size. A magnitude-7.4 quake releases almost 8,000 times more energy than a magnitude-4.8 earthquake.
The size and location, or epicenter, of the 1817 earthquake has never been pinned down so closely before. U.S. Geological Survey research geophysicist Susan Hough and her colleagues zeroed in on the source from newly uncovered archival records, looking at where the shaking was strongest.
But they weren't sure about the tsunami link: The 11 a.m. arrival time seemed too late for a 4:30 a.m. earthquake. So they created a computer model of the tsunami, testing different locations and magnitudes. The best fit to force a foot-high (30 centimeters) wave up the mouth of Delaware Bay by about 11 a.m. was a magnitude-7.4 earthquake offshore of South Carolina.
"That was the eureka moment," Hough told LiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet. "Darned if that wave doesn't hit the Delaware River and slow way down."
However, the West Coast Regional Council today moved to reassure the public, saying the Alpine Fault was a far more imminent threat.
The National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (Niwa) led the two-year mapping project for the council, which wanted to assess the tsunami risk for coastal communities.
Niwa marine geologist Philip Barnes said while the faults were relatively large and capable of causing fairly severe earthquakes, it was thought they had extremely long recurrence intervals, meaning that large earthquakes would be very infrequent.
2013-09-07 00:13:30 UTC
2013-09-06 18:13:30 UTC-06:00 at epicenter
Location:
14.668°N 92.075°W depth=67.7km (42.0mi)
Nearby Cities:
6km (4mi) SW of Pajapita, Guatemala
8km (5mi) E of Ciudad Tecun Uman, Guatemala
20km (12mi) NE of Suchiate, Mexico
22km (14mi) W of Coatepeque, Guatemala
168km (104mi) W of Guatemala City, Guatemala
Technical Data









