• Tag Archives Chilean earthquake
  • Terremoto

    Imbolc                                       Full Wild Moon

    Earthquakes.  Great and terrible.  They fascinate me, as do volcanoes and tsunami.

    As you look at this scale, notice that it goes up logarithmically, not geometrically.  An 8.5 is 5 billion tons of tnt while a 9.0, only .5 higher on the scale is 32 billion tons.)

    Here’s a good Richter scale comparison:

    Richter     TNT for Seismic    Example
    Magnitude      Energy Yield    (approximate)

    -1.5                6 ounces   Breaking a rock on a lab table
    1.0               30 pounds   Large Blast at a Construction Site
    1.5              320 pounds
    2.0                1 ton      Large Quarry or Mine Blast
    2.5              4.6 tons
    3.0               29 tons
    3.5               73 tons
    4.0            1,000 tons     Small Nuclear Weapon
    4.5            5,100 tons     Average Tornado (total energy)
    5.0           32,000 tons
    5.5           80,000 tons     Little Skull Mtn., NV Quake, 1992
    6.0        1 million tons     Double Spring Flat, NV Quake, 1994
    6.5        5 million tons     Northridge, CA Quake, 1994
    7.0       32 million tons     Hyogo-Ken Nanbu, Japan Quake, 1995; Largest Thermonuclear Weapon
    7.5      160 million tons     Landers, CA Quake, 1992
    8.0        1 billion tons     San Francisco, CA Quake, 1906
    8.5        5 billion tons     Anchorage, AK Quake, 1964
    9.0       32 billion tons     Chilean Quake, 1960
    10.0       1 trillion tons     (San-Andreas type fault circling Earth)
    12.0     160 trillion tons     (Fault Earth in half through center,
    OR Earth’s daily receipt of solar energy)
    Plus there is the tsunami:

    The following was a report from today.  Can you imagine what must have been going through their minds, given the devastation from the 1960 tsunami?

    In Hawaii, water began pulling away from shore off Hilo Bay on the Big Island just before noon, exposing reefs and sending dark streaks of muddy, sandy water offshore. Waves later washed over Coconut Island, a small park off Hilo’s coast.

    The tsunami caused a series of surges that were about 20 minutes apart, and the waves arrived later and smaller than originally predicted. The highest wave at Hilo measured 5.5 feet (1.7 meters) high, while Maui saw some as high as 2 meters (6.5 feet).