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Post by bernie on Feb 21, 2022 21:34:17 GMT -6
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Post by fitz on Feb 22, 2022 6:37:37 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Feb 24, 2022 20:22:36 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Mar 2, 2022 9:52:20 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Mar 6, 2022 15:02:11 GMT -6
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Post by fitz on Mar 7, 2022 7:38:00 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Mar 13, 2022 15:45:03 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Mar 13, 2022 15:46:24 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Mar 16, 2022 8:58:27 GMT -6
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Post by fitz on Mar 17, 2022 5:02:27 GMT -6
It's interesting sometimes when you go read the reports posted on EMSC. The number, the distances and of course, the comments themselves to get a sense of how severe it was.
Reports on the 7.3 in Namie (and the 6.4) overwhelmingly stated the EQ was "long". Many said 2 minutes! Probably exaggerated a little, but this stood out to me. When most people report that an EQ was "long", they mean 10 - 15 seconds.
A few hours later, this one below (first reported as a 6.0) hit Iran, and reading the posts, again "long" was the adjective most used to describe it. So not only were these EQs big in magnitude, but long in duration. So living thru a 7.3 EQ that goes for 10 seconds would be terrifying, but I counted 50 seconds of shaking in one video and that was just a partial clip.
Violent. Check it out!
M 5.8 - 57 km NNW of Bandar-e Lengeh, Iran VIII VII
Time 2022-03-16 19:15:45 (UTC-04:00) Location 27.025°N 54.632°E Depth 10.0 km
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Post by bernie on Mar 19, 2022 15:59:08 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Mar 22, 2022 11:32:42 GMT -6
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Post by fitz on Mar 22, 2022 15:51:26 GMT -6
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Post by bernie on Mar 23, 2022 21:59:12 GMT -6
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Post by fitz on Mar 30, 2022 15:08:32 GMT -6
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