There may be a lot of dangerous earthquake activity going on in the world any time now. There was a magnitude 6.2 off the Northeastern coast of Honshu, Japan a few hours ago. There is due to be a magnitude 7 or greater somewhere. There could also be something more significant coming up in Southern California. I'm not going to jump the gun and add Southern California to the potential hit list for the next strong earthquake. I have never done that before. It is too risky. However, I am putting it out there that there is a possibility of something more significant here any day now. There has not been any magnitude 4s in over 2 months and two weeks have passed since a magnitude 3 happened in this region. In terms the rest of the world, these are the regions that could be potential candidates for the next large quake(s): Indonesia(Sumatra, Java, Kepulauan Babar region), East Timor, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Fiji, Tonga, New Zealand, Japan, Philippines, Taiwan, Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan, Central America, Chile, Peru, or Argentina... There could also be something going on off the coast of Southern Alaska or the Aleutian Islands. So far, the chances of more dangerous earthquake activity in the world any time or day now this week are extremely high. There is also an extremely high chance for higher levels of activity in Southern California. There could also be more taking place in Central or Northern California and other parts of the Western U.S.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Report: 7.2.23
A magnitude 6.9 struck the Tonga region earlier. There was no tsunami danger for the US west coast, British Columbia, and Alaska, the US T...
-
A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.2 with an intermediate focal depth hit northern Japan's Hokkaido on Sunday evening...
-
A magnitude 6.9 struck the Tonga region earlier. There was no tsunami danger for the US west coast, British Columbia, and Alaska, the US T...
-
It continues to be active out there. So far, several other significant earthquakes have occurred in the world over the last day. Many afte...
No comments:
Post a Comment