Earthquake danger just went up a notch
By Associated PressMEDFORD, Ore. (AP) — A light earthquake deep under the mountains of southwestern Oregon may have left many slumbering at 2 a.m. Thursday, but a geologist said it was an eye-opener. The quake was about 24 miles deep and arose from a plate of basalt under the Pacific Ocean sliding beneath the North American continent. People reported feeling the quake as far away as Eugene. For years, scientists doubted that such deep quakes happened under Oregon, said Ian Madin, chief scientist of the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries. "Now it turns out that they do," he said Friday. The quake Thursday was light, at magnitude 4.1. But Madin said it's a sign that one of magnitude 6 or 7 could arise from that slab, known as the Juan de Fuca plate. The plate is the source of many earthquakes of greater magnitude in the Puget Sound area, he said, but it is under greater stress there. Madin said there are three sources of quakes in the region:
On the Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network's Web site, more than 130 people reported feeling the quake Thursday beneath the Klamath Mountains. The Medford Mail Tribune reported that the bulk of the reports came from Grants Pass, the population center closest to the quake. But reports also came from along the coast — Gold Beach, Agness and Coquille — and from towns farther afield: Rogue River, Medford, Bend, Corvallis and Eugene. "When the source is that far down, it affects a fairly large area and the effect can feel much the same over the whole large area," said Bill Steele, a seismologist at the seismograph network's University of Washington office. (Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.) Most Popular
|
Upload directly from your mobile device. Learn howYouNews
This content requires the latest Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript enabled.
Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.
Stay Connected |
Connect with KCBYPOLL: Winter weather |