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Fragony
02-27-2010, 09:26
8.8 Holy crap, this is bad

http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsww/Quakes/us2010tfan.html

naut
02-27-2010, 09:33
One off Japan (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8540063.stm) as well, between 6.9 and 7.3.

Fragony
02-27-2010, 11:42
Japanese and kiwi members, better find a tree, tsunami on it's way, stay safe

Furunculus
02-27-2010, 11:46
thank god britain is geologically ancient.

Fragony
02-27-2010, 12:12
Word to that, well we aren't all that ancient of course, but none of that crap. This is one of the most terrifying footage I have ever seen, liquefaction, earthquake shaking up the saturated earth.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KLZFlnND0hA

40 meter wave supposedly just hit Chili some Islands on the coast of Chili, dear god nothing can be alive there anymore.

http://twitter.com/search?q=%20Juan%20Fernandez%20island

Furunculus
02-27-2010, 13:17
all the fault systems and subduction zones around Britain are ancient, very little movement these days.

Reverend Joe
02-27-2010, 14:26
I thought this was gonna be a weird thread about celebrating an earthquake by making chili.

Yeah, I'll just go out the back door.

Shaka_Khan
02-27-2010, 15:09
I copied from here and posted in another forum. Good thing I noticed the spelling just in time. Grrrrrr

Lemur
02-27-2010, 20:38
Not bothering to spell the Chile's name correctly, Frag? Way to show respect. Three cheers for Hollunde.

Time magazine had a man on the ground; here's his report (http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1968505,00.html).

Louis VI the Fat
02-27-2010, 20:59
Rip to all casualties.

Hope those tsunamis will turn out alright. Scary.


Not bothering to spell the Chile's name correctly, Frag?Oh, come on, now. It's nobody's fault that there are two threads on this subject, one remaining hidden behind an incorrectly spelled title.
In French and Dutch it is Chili. So similar that one could be forgiven for not realising that its Chile in English and Spanish.

And Fragony is not from Holland. :beam:

naut
02-27-2010, 21:31
And Fragony is not from Holland. :beam:
Der Nederlands. ~;p

Fragony
02-27-2010, 21:53
Not bothering to spell the Chile's name correctly, Frag? Way to show respect. Three cheers for Hollunde.


I can screw up in 7 languages

KukriKhan
02-28-2010, 03:52
Looks like Chili predates Chile


There are various theories about the origin of the word Chile. According to a theory proposed by 18th century Spanish chronicler Diego de Rosales,[10] the Incas of Peru called the valley of the Aconcagua "Chili" by corruption of the name of a Picunche tribal chief ("cacique") called Tili, who ruled the area at the time of the Incan conquest in the 15th century.[11][12] Another theory points to the similarity of the valley of the Aconcagua with that of the Casma Valley in Peru, where there was a town and valley named Chili.[12]

Other theories say Chile may derive its name from the indigenous Mapuche word chilli, which may mean "where the land ends,"[13] "the deepest point of the Earth,"[14] or "sea gulls;"[15] or from the Quechua chin, "cold", or the Aymara tchili, meaning "snow".[16] Another meaning attributed to chilli is the onomatopoeic cheele-cheele—the Mapuche imitation of a bird call.[13] The Spanish conquistadors heard about this name from the Incas, and the few survivors of Diego de Almagro's first Spanish expedition south from Peru in 1535–36 called themselves the "men of Chilli."[13] Ultimately, Almagro is credited with the universalization of the name Chile, after naming the Mapocho valley as such.[12]

Small wonder the seafaring Nederlander-ers adopted and kept the original.

This reminds me of a frontroom discussion of Zeeland mussels, me chiming in with how easy New Zealand mussels were to get here in California. rofl. Our resident Dutchers gently corrected me.

-edit-
rip the earthquake sufferers. No stranger to temblors here, I can only imagine an 8.8 shaking.

Lemur
02-28-2010, 04:34
I guess I got thrown by the sound of the word; the two vowels don't sound alike. Instead of sounding like "really" it's more in line with "see they."

I'm encouraged that the death toll has not yet reached four digits. After the 200k monstrous disaster in Haiti, anything under a thousand seems miraculous.

-edit-

Also, apologies to Frag. I was spluttering with embarrassment and indignation over what I felt to be a forced error Lemur's-disease-wise. No excuse for me to take it out on a fellow Orgah, though.

KukriKhan
02-28-2010, 06:16
I guess I got thrown by the sound of the word; the two vowels don't sound alike. Instead of sounding like "really" it's more in line with "see they."

I'm encouraged that the death toll has not yet reached four digits. After the 200k monstrous disaster in Haiti, anything under a thousand seems miraculous.

-edit-

Also, apologies to Frag. I was spluttering with embarrassment and indignation over what I felt to be a forced error Lemur's-disease-wise. No excuse for me to take it out on a fellow Orgah, though.

Bookmark this Laddies. Before us goes an honorable man. We'd do well to emulate.

:bow:

Fragony
02-28-2010, 08:52
Also, apologies to Frag. I was spluttering with embarrassment and indignation over what I felt to be a forced error Lemur's-disease-wise. No excuse for me to take it out on a fellow Orgah, though.

No need I like it rough

Der Nederlands.

De Nederlanden or Nederland. Louis is quite right, Holland is just the western part of the Netherlands. I don't know how the whole Netherlands became 'Holland' but it's an exercise in futility to make any sense out of this country.

Louis VI the Fat
02-28-2010, 16:44
Yay! Its the next morning and those tsunamis turned out to be little more than great surfing waves. Very happy about that. I'm a bit astonished, relieved, that an 8.8 earthquake had this few casualties.

Even so, hundreds died, there's massive destruction, and dozens of people are trapped under collapsed houses, struggling for their lives as we speak. A tragedy.



I don't know how the whole Netherlands became 'Holland'Maybe because your Location screams 'THIS IS HOLLAND'? ~;p


but it's an exercise in futility to make any sense out of this country.No, easy. The Netherlands is washed up sediments of French rivers inhabited by swamp Germans.

gaelic cowboy
02-28-2010, 17:13
There seems to be a fair bit of looting going on saw watercannon being used on crowds of looters on telly this morning.
Society which seems so solid is ever so fragile when nature bears it fangs.
RIP to all the dead very sad indeed

Fragony
02-28-2010, 17:55
No, easy. The Netherlands is washed up sediments of French rivers inhabited by swamp Germans.

See? We can make something out of anything, we made the Netherlands. The ancients call it the Dutch touch.

Kadagar_AV
03-01-2010, 00:11
In fragonys defense....

What is the only human-made thing you can see from space?

Many would answer the great wall of China, but to be honest, no you can not see it from space.



No, the netherlands would be the correct answer... If not for humans, the country would have been flooded years and years ago... It says something about a country when it is at or below sea level, next to the sea.

So well, human determination comes at its peak whenever you look at a map and see the netherlands there...



As to the thread title, I was kind of sure it would be about bowel movements...



About Chile, all my best wishes, none of my money.

Louis VI the Fat
03-01-2010, 00:35
Massive storm ravaging France today. Dozens dead, a million without electricity, six meter high waves batter the Atlantic coast. :help:


No, the netherlands would be the correct answer... If not for humans, the country would have been flooded years and years ago... It says something about a country when it is at or below sea level, next to the sea.With one caveat...the Dutch are themselves responsible for their country ending up belowe sea level.

The Netherlands is one of the classic examples of human exploitation causing indefinate environmental problems.
It is what happens when you turn a swamp into agricultural land. If one moves the water out of a swamp, one will end up with very fertile land. It will be a garden of Eden, for decades on end. But, inevitably, the ground will sink. Will end up below the water level, irreversibly. Then you will have to spend eternity keeping the water out.

The Dutch did not create land out of sea, they created sea out of land. Just like the Phoenicians and Palestians didn't make the desert bloom, but turned a blossoming land into desert by cutting all the trees. And just like digging up all the CO2 that over millions of years got buried and releasing it back in the atmosphere will create etc etc

Centurion1
03-01-2010, 01:20
RIP to all the Chileans.

god my dad was about to go on business there.

Seamus Fermanagh
03-01-2010, 05:49
Yay! Its the next morning and those tsunamis turned out to be little more than great surfing waves. Very happy about that. I'm a bit astonished, relieved, that an 8.8 earthquake had this few casualties.

Even so, hundreds died, there's massive destruction, and dozens of people are trapped under collapsed houses, struggling for their lives as we speak. A tragedy.


Maybe because your Location screams 'THIS IS HOLLAND'? ~;p

No, easy. The Netherlands is washed up sediments of French rivers inhabited by swamp Germans.


The quake in Haiti was a thousand times less powerful, but their building standards were even more so. Sad all around.

lars573
03-01-2010, 06:12
Yay! Its the next morning and those tsunamis turned out to be little more than great surfing waves. Very happy about that. I'm a bit astonished, relieved, that an 8.8 earthquake had this few casualties.

Even so, hundreds died, there's massive destruction, and dozens of people are trapped under collapsed houses, struggling for their lives as we speak. A tragedy.
Hardly a tragedy, they lived in a earthquake zone. I have zero sympathy for people who die in geological or climatic events that are common knowledge. I had no sympathy for the Hatians, I have none for Chileans. And when Vesuvius pops it's cork again and barbeque's a quarter million Neopolitans I won't have sympathy then.

Fragony
03-01-2010, 06:55
How can you not give a crap about so much human suffering. Won't you give a crap when a earthquake hits LA or SF

Viking
03-01-2010, 09:23
Hardly a tragedy, they lived in a earthquake zone. I have zero sympathy for people who die in geological or climatic events that are common knowledge. I had no sympathy for the Hatians, I have none for Chileans. And when Vesuvius pops it's cork again and barbeque's a quarter million Neopolitans I won't have sympathy then.

Good thing then that you might in theory have sympathy at all. :laugh4:

lars573
03-02-2010, 06:37
How can you not give a crap about so much human suffering.
Simply put, they aren't me. So frack'em.


Won't you give a crap when a earthquake hits LA or SF
I just said I wouldn't. Every day you live in a earthquake prone area is a day you risk losing your life or home to an earthquake.

Strike For The South
03-02-2010, 06:46
Simply put, they aren't me. So frack'em.


I just said I wouldn't. Every day you live in a earthquake prone area is a day you risk losing your life or home to an earthquake.

And when the heat fails you will freeze to death...

lars573
03-02-2010, 06:53
No so much. My heat has failed. Due to huricanes, and blizzards, and the furnace just plain crapping out. I'm still here.

KukriKhan
03-02-2010, 22:21
Maybe one can find sympathy for Mother Earth herself; this article (http://toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20100302/quake_nasa_100302/20100302/?hub=TorontoNewHome) points out that the Chilean quake was so big, it altered the mass of the planet, and shortened our day.

Azathoth
03-02-2010, 23:30
Maybe one can find sympathy for Mother Earth herself; this article points out that the Chilean quake was so big, it altered the mass of the planet, and shortened our day.

Eh, stuff like this happens all the time. The Earth on the whole is still slowing down.

Aemilius Paulus
03-03-2010, 01:33
Eh, stuff like this happens all the time. The Earth on the whole is still slowing down.
Yeah, the days were quite short in the beginning of our geologic history.

Fragony
03-04-2010, 11:53
That is pretty humbling.

edit, if an earthquake can do that then so can we, if we put some mass here and there for centrifugal force we can probably change the orbit at will. Why would you want to but still.