And breaking news - another earthquake in Victoria, Murrayville near the SA border 0347. Not as severe, first estimate 4.8 magnitude and several aftershocks.
Thanks for posting that, very interesting.
Of course, another factor is how closely buildings adhere to their design when actually being built. But that article points out that the older building code was inadequate. It also points out the major effect of the properties of the subsoil on ground movement in an earthquake (the Christchurch quake showed this up dramatically).
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
And breaking news - another earthquake in Victoria, Murrayville near the SA border 0347. Not as severe, first estimate 4.8 magnitude and several aftershocks.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
1985 110 Dual Cab 4.6 R380 ARB Lockers (currently NIS due to roof kissing road)
1985 110 Station Wagon 3.5 LT85 (unmolested blank canvas)
Some clients of mine in Tokyo had part of a subway station under their 20 storey building - their engineers told them that in a really big earthquake their building would stay upright but would punch down into the subway station in one piece and they'd be exiting to street level from the second or third floor.
The Fukushima earthquake was about 400 km north of Tokyo Disneyland but it still destroyed their carparks and it took them months to reopen. Tokyo Disneyland built on reclaimed land that used to part of Tokyo Bay and is close to a major fault line that runs across Tokyo Bay, so it is in fact a sketchy place to have an amusement park.
When I lived in Tokyo I had serious gear to prepare for a bad earthquake - as part of my job I got to read the reports on what was expected to happen if a big one hit Tokyo, and the reports on what had happened at Kobe - but most people I spoke to (both Japanese and expats) thought that I was a lunatic: that wasn't the case after Fukushima, in fact a lot of expats left permanently. In the end, one of the reasons we left Japan was my concern about being in Tokyo if a big earthquake hit, in particular that my kids were scattered around the city at different schools and we might not be able to get everyone to safety. My wife thought that I was worrying too much, but when we were watching the tsunami and what was happening in Tokyo and when Fukushima radiation cloud looked like it was about to drift across Tokyo (which would've particularly affected kids) she actually said that she was grateful that I'd been so worried.
Arapiles
2014 D4 HSE
Now why would you quote an overseas website rather than the Australian one? Earthquakes@GA (click on the big red -> orange -> yellow blob on the SA border.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
When were in a Tokyo hotel one morning a quake hit we were in bed at the time and as the building shook , it did come to my mind there was 20 floors of concrete was above our heads. It was a tad unnerving. Traveling on the extensive under ground and hurtling along at great speed on the Shinkansen it crossed my mind a couple of times, even though they have safety measures like the train will stop, but the thought of a city falling on top of the trains was a something you don't want to think about.
We visited a temple and there was this big buddha up on a hill, and we read about it being knocked by a tsunami hundreds of years ago, and i though that must of been one mother of a wave to get all the way there, and walking long the local street there were signs directing you to the escape routes in case of tsunami.
The locals are used to it and have phone apps warnings. Part of living in Japan.
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