Subject: RE: Uh.... Maybe those 2012 doomsday guys are right |
From: "Betty Lancaster" <bettylancaster.1224@gmail.com> |
Date: 3/2/10, 09:56 |
To: "'Karen Lancaster'" <lancaster.karen@gmail.com>, "'Barrett Brown'" <barriticus@gmail.com> |
Okay, now I’m
worried……
From: Karen Lancaster
[mailto:lancaster.karen@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 02, 2010 8:03
AM
To: Barrett Brown;
bettylancaster.1224@gmail.com
Subject: Uh.... Maybe those 2012
doomsday guys are right
The earthquake that killed more than 700 people in
Bloomberg News
The
earthquake that killed more than 700 people in
Quakes
can involve shifting hundreds of kilometers of rock by several meters, changing
the distribution of mass on the planet. This affects the Earth's rotation, said
Richard Gross, a geophysicist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
"The
length of the day should have gotten shorter by 1.26 microseconds (millionths
of a second)," Gross said Monday in an e-mail. "The axis about which
the Earth's mass is balanced should have moved by 2.7 milliarcseconds (about 8
centimeters or 3 inches)."
The
changes can be modeled, though they're difficult to physically detect given
their small size, Gross said. Some changes may be more obvious and islands may
have shifted, according to Andreas Rietbrock, a professor of Earth Sciences at
"It's
what we call the ice-skater effect," David Kerridge, head of Earth hazards
and systems at the British Geological Survey in
Rietbrock
said he hasn't been able to get in touch with seismologists in Concepción to
discuss the quake, which registered 8.8 on the Richter scale.
"What
definitely the earthquake has done is made the Earth ring like a bell,"
Rietbrock said.
The
magnitude 9.1 Sumatran in 2004 that generated an
The
changes happen on the day and then carry on "forever," Benjamin Fong
Chao, dean of Earth Sciences of the
"This
small contribution is buried in larger changes due to other causes, such as
atmospheric mass moving around on Earth," he said.