Nisqually Earthquake

The Nisqually earthquake occurred on February 28, 2001, and was one of the largest recorded earthquakes in Washington state history. The quake measured 6.8 on the Richter Scale and was centered about 17 km northeast of Olympia at a depth of 52km. Most of the property damage occurred very near the epicenter or in unreinforced concrete or masonry buildings, such as those in the Pioneer Square and Sodo neighborhoods of Seattle. There were no reports of deaths from the earthquake, but some sources state there was one death from a stress-related heart condition at the time of the earthquake. The Puget Sound area where this earthquake occurred is prone to deep earthquakes due to the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate's subduction under the North American Plate, which causes stress in the former as it sinks into the mantle. Similar significant earthquakes occurred in the same general region on April 29, 1965 (magnitude 6.5, depth 63km), and April 13, 1949 (magnitude 7.1, depth 53km).

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
muhurta
compressive stress
thomas johnson
thomas johnson (kansas)
thomas johnson (irish politician)
gdansk bay
douai bible
garrison keillor's radio show
uss grampus (ss 523)
uss grampus (ss 207)
uss grampus (ss 4)
uss grampus (1863)
uss grampus (1820)
patient care
simon wiesenthal center
elizabeth bates
lloyd c. douglas
roman candle
gary stewart (singer)
north american orthodox catholic theological consultation
gkn plc
kilkenny castle
einstein's field equation
advergaming
phelps dodge corporation
fullmetal alchemist
joe hoeffel
thomas johnson (designer)
camping (disambiguation)
oberallgu
praxeology
black sabbath, vol. 4
brahman (god)
brig. n
freedom county, washington
kimi ga nozomu eien
douglas island
hingham, massachusetts
skype
ethelbert woodbridge nevin
liberal democracy of slovenia
iceland (supermarket)
futuna
czech social democratic party