Earthquakes
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Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 6.1 - NE of Namie, Japan

Namie Quake_180513
© USGS
Event Time
2013-05-18 05:48:00 UTC
2013-05-18 14:48:00 UTC+09:00 at epicenter

Location
37.761°N 141.454°E depth=41.5km (25.8mi)

Nearby Cities
50km (31mi) NE of Namie, Japan
61km (38mi) ESE of Watari, Japan
62km (39mi) ESE of Marumori, Japan
63km (39mi) ESE of Kakuda, Japan
278km (173mi) NE of Tokyo, Japan

Technical Details

Bizarro Earth

5.1 Magnitude earthquake ripples through Toronto, Canada

Earthquakes Canada is reporting a5.1-magnitude earthquake just west of Ottawa that was felt as far away as Toronto. The federal agency that monitors earthquakes revised its original report, saying it registered a 5.1-magnitude temblor with an epicenter located about 21 kilometers (13 miles) northeast of Shawville, Quebec, about an hour's drive outside Ottawa. It was felt as far west as Toronto, Canada's largest city, but no damage was immediately reported. Twitter erupted with reports of buildings shaking in Ottawa for several seconds. Ontario's premier, who lives in Toronto, tweeted that her house was shaking. Ontario Provincial Police in Arnprior, Ontario, not far from the epicenter, say they have received no reports of damage. The original report said a 4.8-magnitude quake was centered near the town of Braeside, Ontario. - HP
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Cloud Precipitation

Video: Strange weather phenomena for the first days of May 2013


Bizarro Earth

Alaska's Pavlof Volcano rumbles- unleashes 20,000 ft cloud of ash

Eruptions from Pavlof Volcano continued on Wednesday after rumbling to life earlier in the week. The 8,261-foot peak on the Alaska Peninsula awoke Monday morning, kicking off a "low-level eruption of lava," according to the Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO). Sitting about 30 miles northeast of the community of King Cove, Pavlof is a frequently-active volcano that last erupted in 2007. The volcano's rumbling has strengthened this week. At about noon Tuesday, satellite images showed a lava flow had coursed a third of a mile down the northern side of the volcano.
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By late Tuesday, an ash plume extended 15,000 feet above sea level, moving downwind to the northeast for up to 100 miles before dispersing. The National Weather Service issued a "Significant Meterological Event" warning, called a SIGMET, to alert pilots of hazardous conditions in the area. Pavlof continued to rumble Wednesday, with one pilot reporting a dark ash cloud reaching 20,000 feet. Residents of Cold Bay, located 37 miles southwest of the volcano, observed incandescent glow at the summit during the night. Pilot reports and photographs from yesterday afternoon indicate that the lava flow extending down the northwest flank is still active and has generated debris-laden flow deposits, presumably from interaction of hot lava with the snow and ice on the flank.

Blackbox

Hmm...What could finally topple Iran's regime? Earthquakes...

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© Stanislav Filippov/AP/FileEU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iran's chief negotiator, Saeed Jalili, leave a podium in Almaty, Kazakhstan, Feb. 26. Ms. Ashton and Mr. Jalili meet in Istanbul today to work toward an agreement on Iran's nuclear program.
In the past half-century, earthquakes have directly contributed to the overthrow of at least two authoritarian regimes in Nicaragua and Iran. By exposing government corruption and incompetency, earthquakes wield the ability to inflict political damage to the world's most ironclad regimes with a level of potency matched only by their unpredictability. As EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iran's chief negotiator Saeed Jalili meet in Turkey today to continue working toward an agreement on Iran's nuclear program, the Iranian leadership should heed history's warning: No nuclear program can save a regime from a toppling earthquake.

In 1972, a powerful earthquake devastated Nicaragua's capital, Managua, setting off a chain reaction of public discontent that eventually led to the ousting of the notoriously corrupt Somoza dynasty. For the Nicaraguan people, President Somoza's squandering of international emergency aid following the earthquake was the last straw in a series of blatantly corrupt moves that showed little regard for their wellbeing.

The second instance occurred in September 1978 in Iran, when a 7.7 magnitude earthquake killed more than 26,000 near the eastern city of Tabas. The dismal response of the equally corrupt shah pushed Iran's already bubbling popular uprising to a boiling point, one month after the CIA made its historically erroneous assessment that the country was "not in a revolutionary or even pre-revolutionary situation."

As the Somozas and the shah can attest from their resting place in history's dustbin, earthquakes are much more than nature's most destructive physical force.

Comment: Author Daniel Nisman is the Middle East section intelligence director at Max Security Solutions, a geo-political and security risk consulting firm.

And then we have this:
A Haiti Disaster Relief Scenario was envisaged by the U.S. Military one day before the earthquake
The Militarization of Emergency Aid to Haiti: Is it a humanitarian operation or an invasion?


Bizarro Earth

Massive underwater volcano discovered off the coast of southeast Alaska

U.S. Forest Service Geologist Jim Baichtal, who is based on Prince of Wales Island, and Anchorage geologist Sue Karl were looking at some hydrographic surveys, something geologists tend to do. When we were done, I noticed the area from Thorne Arm to Rudyerd had been surveyed," Baichtal said. "I zoomed in and there was this large... some kind of volcano, and two other dome-like structures." Karl added that, "This new NOAA survey allowed us to see things that people had never seen before." Karl said a modern example of a similar eruption is Surtsey, a volcanic island in Iceland, which erupted from the sea floor in the 1960s, building itself up and eventually breaching the surface to form the island. Karl points out that when the newly discovered volcano erupted, sea levels also were lower than they are now, but even with that, "We still have too much depth. We have to call on glacial loading and rebound."

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Comment:
Alaska's Mt. Pavlof volcano is 'very, very hot'


Bizarro Earth

Earth reeling from a swarm of earthquakes over last 72 hours

A flurry of earthquakes continues across the planet over the past 72 hours, showing few signs of abatement. Seismic tension continues to build across the Pacific Plate, the Cocos plate (Central America), and the Nazca plate, near South America. Tectonic plate agitation appears to be increasing, along with volcanic pressures under many of the world's major volcanoes.
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Bizarro Earth

Western Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami hazard potential greater than previously thought

Earthquakes similar in magnitude to the 2004 Sumatra earthquake could occur in an area beneath the Arabian Sea at the Makran subduction zone, according to recent research published in Geophysical Research Letters. The research was carried out by scientists from the University of Southampton based at the National Oceanography Centre Southampton (NOCS), and the Pacific Geoscience Centre, Natural Resources Canada.

The study suggests that the risk from undersea earthquakes and associated tsunami in this area of the Western Indian Ocean - which could threaten the coastlines of Pakistan, Iran, Oman, India and potentially further afield - has been previously underestimated. The results highlight the need for further investigation of pre-historic earthquakes and should be fed into hazard assessment and planning for the region.

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Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 7.0 - W of Agrihan, Northern Mariana Islands

Agrihan Quake_140513
© USGS
Event Time
2013-05-14 00:32:25 UTC
2013-05-14 10:32:25 UTC+10:00 at epicenter

Location
18.753°N 145.261°E depth=603.4km (374.9mi)

Nearby Cities
42km (26mi) W of Agrihan, Northern Mariana Islands
395km (245mi) N of Northern Islands Municipality - Mayor's Office, Northern Mariana Islands
395km (245mi) N of Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands
420km (261mi) N of JP Tinian Town pre-WW2, Northern Mariana Islands
578km (359mi) N of Yigo Village, Guam

Technical Details

Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 6.0 - ESE of Minab, Iran

Iran Quake_110513
© USGS
Event Time
2013-05-11 02:08:14 UTC
2013-05-11 06:38:14 UTC+04:30 at epicenter

Location
26.784°N 57.841°E depth=36.4km (22.6mi)

Nearby Cities
85km (53mi) ESE of Minab, Iran
157km (98mi) E of Qeshm, Iran
161km (100mi) ESE of Bandar 'Abbas, Iran
172km (107mi) ENE of Khasab, Oman
359km (223mi) NNW of Muscat, Oman

Technical details