True. We get over a hundred measurable shakes a day, and some of them, we actually feel. You are right.
I’m again glad I moved to Alaska, and even more so that I am on rocky ground unlike a silt plain like Turnagin Arm or along the coast like around Seward. There is a fault near me, a measely minor one, the 4.6 last week was less than 10 miles from me, I most definitely that one, it was one sharp jolt, almost like an upthrust.
I do not think its reasonable or logical to say of the hundreds of quakes a day we get in Alaska that they are leading up to a big one, if that was the rule then we should have had a 10.0 a long time ago.
I’m again glad I moved to Alaska, and even more so that I am on rocky ground unlike a silt plain like Turnagin Arm or along the coast like around Seward. There is a fault near me, a measely minor one, the 4.6 last week was less than 10 miles from me, I most definitely felt that one, it was one sharp jolt, almost like an upthrust.
I do not think its reasonable or logical to say of the hundreds of quakes a day we get in Alaska that they are leading up to a big one, if that was the rule then we should have had a 10.0 a long time ago.
(editing, missing word)