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Saketi said:worried about what?
What does he need the nukes for?Dalamari said:I hear that Lex Luther is also going to hijack 2 nuclear missles and fire them into the fault
And that's terrible.Dalamari said:I hear that Lex Luther is also going to hijack 2 nuclear missles and fire them into the fault
Is there really any justification for that? I thought those sort of things were entirly random.Hectic Glenn said:Its been what now? 250 years since the last one, so one is sure to strike shortly.
ríomhaire said:Is there really any justification for that? I thought those sort of things were entirly random.
gick said:There is a good reason for it, I did it in geography a while ago. Suffice to say, when the big one hits, San Francisco etc is shafted. Not as shafted as Tokyo will be when it gets its own Big One though...
Voodoo_Chile said:Yes but Tokyo is the most combustable city on the face of the earth afterall(So sayeth the rules of anime)
It isn't nessacarily random,It has to do with how the plates are moving and when they might come in contact with one another,And since they can measure the speed of the plates(A few mm a year I believe) they have a rough idea of when an earth quake may occur but I don't believe it is very accurate.
PvtRyan said:Nah it's not SA's fault. I mean, I don't think a game can make you kill people tbh.
GordonFreeman911 said:I love Canada.
(Sounds weird, so I fix it.
It used to be "I love You Americans' Neighbors (AKA, us Canadians))
They aren't consistant that is entirely true, however they do occur at regular'ish intervals, for humans it seems like a long time, but in a geographical sense it's very regular. The San Andreas fault particularly applies to this, because it's a conservative plate margin they can measure the distance the plates move each year on average. Recently i believe movement has reduced moreso, due to the friction between the plates and so it's all leading up to a big quake soon. If there is a full slip it will measure 8.0 on the Richter Scale, which is an immense earthquake. Hopefully that won't happen, but we can expect something, in the not too distant future.ríomhaire said:Is there really any justification for that? I thought those sort of things were entirly random.
Ennui said:Really, what he's saying, is that there's no way we can know or do anythinga bout it so stop worrying about it.
If you're worried about it, at least do something. It never hurts to do a little to prepare for what is an inevitability, yet still happens rather randomly in the window of many years. Read some brochures on how you can prepare. You can do simple things like having supplies around for if it ever happens and learn how to best cope with an earthquake when you're in the middle of one (stand under doorways was the one I always remembered for some reason )MTG_Maro said:I live in San Diego, anybody else live around there whos worried?