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Earthquake shakes Australian city
#1
Fri Mar 6, 6:59 am ET

MELBOURNE (AFP) – Australia's second-largest city, Melbourne, was shaken by an earthquake Friday, but police said there were no immediate reports of damage or casualties.

Residents reported buildings shaking across the metropolitan area and other parts of southeastern Victoria state, recently ravaged by wildfires which killed 210 people.

"Being so close to the fire areas and having been on alert the last two to three weeks, our only thought was 'oh my God, what now?'" said Kate Bruce of Doreen.

"My kids thought that the roof was coming off, that's how loud it was here."

The United States Geological Survey said the 4.7 magnitude quake struck about 96 kilometres (59 miles) southeast of Melbourne shortly before 9.00 pm (1000 GMT) at a depth of 10 kilometres.

"We were just sitting down watching the TV and then the whole house absolutely shook," James Sandman of Drouin town told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

"The foundations shook, the walls moved, they wobbled, and myself and my wife just looked at each other and we both then looked at the exits wondering 'do we need to get out?'"

Seismologist Phil Cummins at Geoscience Australia, which monitors earthquake activity, told the national AAP news agency the quake "is unlikely to have caused any damage, except possibly some minor damage near the epicentre."

"We are in Gippsland in Krowera, and the earth tremor sounded like an explosion here," another resident said.

"[It] felt like something very big had hit the house. Our power also went out for about eight to 10 minutes."

Victorian State Emergency Service spokesman Allen Briggs said the service had been inundated with phone calls from the public but there had been no reports of any damage immediately after the tremor.

"It was certainly enough to rattle windows and we've had reports it was felt in metropolitan Melbourne and as far down as Warragul and Leongatha in Gippsland," Briggs said.

Just three Australian earthquakes are known to have caused fatalities, the University of Western Australia says on its website, with the worst being in 1989 in Newcastle in New South Wales state, which killed 13 people.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090306/wl_..._0cxUEtbAF
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#2
In light of the many dolphins and whales that beached themselves in Oz recently this doesn't surprise me.They seem to be predictors  or indicators of earthquakes no matter the cause. 
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#3
Yes MN, I was waiting for the after affects!
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#4
I don't know about you Karen, but you know where I live, and I was home on the PC when it hit.  It shook my house incredibly.  The walls shook, and the tiled concrete slab in my study vibrated at a very low frequency to the point where it actually lifted my feet JUST clear of the floor momentarily.  I kid you not.  The dman thing left a great big crack on the wall in my living area which I only just finished repairing and had to repaint the whole room... which I just did also.

What a bummer.  I hope there aren't any after shocks. :shock:

 
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#5
Now that I have realized the time and everything, yes I did feel something, but only for a few seconds, I went outside to take a look and did not even realize until yesterday what it was! but it would have been nothing like you felt, your right in the middle of it, and what a shame you have to do all that hard work again!

You can guarantee where whales/dolphins are beached, something will happen shortly after.
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#6
I am concerned Karen... I may just leave this area and go a little further from its epicentre.
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#7
Andrew X,

I have been thinking for awhile now to move too, the drought has really got me down this summer, everything is dead and the trees ache with pain, we had a few mls of rain the other day, but we have had none since November, I want to live where I can have my garden back, grow vegetables and the heat is getting too extreme in vic these past years, and I feel it is just going to get worse.

So someone said to me the other day, the whole earthquake thing has also to do with the dredging, what’s your thoughts on that?
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#8
I just noticed your response Karen.  Luckily the forum's still going.

The only thing I can think of regarding that is if they're dredging so deep that it is somehow creating a sort of NEW tectonic rift between the subterrain East of the RIP/heads and West of it.  This may then in turn allow the subterrain from Gippsland to actually SLIDE enough towards the Mornington Peninsula as to cause tremors of considerable magnitude.  If this is so, then one cannot outrule that this minute slip in the subterrain could EASILY be transfered towards our closest natural tectonic plates or faultlines, which are just off Gippsland in Bass Strait, around the Mornington Peninsula itself and in the Flinders Ranges.  This in turn could then TRIGGER a proper Earthquake in our region of considerable magnitude... devastating in fact.

Although many think that we are relatively safe from quakes because we don't have Faultlines, the latest research is proving this to be a falacy of sorts:

Quote:Geoscientists identify seismic activity in Southern Australia Including the  Flinders Ranges
Quote:Australia is not as geologically stable as many think. Despite popular belief, Australia is a geologically active continent with moving fault-lines, regular seismic activity, and a long history of mountain making, said internationally respected geologist, Associate Professor Malcolm Wallace from the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne. 

Associate Professor Wallace was the recipient of the prestigious Geological Society of Australia (Victoria Division) Selwyn Medal for 2008 on Thursday night 25 September at the Geological Society of Australia’s (Victoria Division) annual Selwyn Lecture 2008.

The Medal, named in honour of Sir Alfred Selwyn, an eminent Victorian pioneering geologist and founder of the Geological Survey of Victoria. recognises significant ongoing or former contributions of high calibre to any field of Victorian geology.

“Australia is considered by many to be one of the flattest and most geologically stable continents in the world.” Associate Professor Wallace said. “But we have discovered substantial evidence of ancient and current mountain building on this continent, and seismic activity which commenced 10 million years ago and continues to this day.
Quote:“There are numerous young faultlines weaving their way across southern Australia, including one that goes right around the perimeter of Adelaide.  There are also young faultlines running through the Mornington Peninsula outside Melbourne, the Strzelecki Ranges in Victoria and the Flinders Ranges in South Australia."
Quote:http://cooberpedyregionaltimes.wordpress...australia/
What I'd like to know which no text or paper on this subject addresses is HOW these NEW, or as they call them, YOUNG faultines have suddenly appeared or been discovered?  These things don't just pop up as do flowers.

I feel there is A LOT MORE to this tremor we had Karen than meets the eye. 

Also let's not forget that this is not the first time that the channel in the RIP has been made deeper and wider.  From memory, I know they deepened it AFTER WW2 using MASSIVE amounts of dynomite.  The marine life that would have killed and mamed would have been horrific.  Let alone the havoc it would have inflicted on the subterrain.  Now the dredging... this cannot be good for the subterrain no matter what they say or don't say about it.

Not good.
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#9
I agree that there is more to it, I don’t see how faultlines can just appear or how earthquakes can suddenly become part of the southern end of oz, I still think that there has been activity way down south, with the whales and dolphins recently becoming beached, I don’t believe in coincidences, they are doing something.
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#10
Victorians shaken by earthquake
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,27574,252...21,00.html

By Matthew Schulz and Lanai Vasek

NEWS.com.au

March 18, 2009 04:51pm

* Melbourne hit by earth tremor
* Offices shake, lights go off
* Latest updates on Twitter

VICTORIANS have been struck by another earth tremor about 4.30pm today.

A seismologist from Geoscience Australia, which monitors earthquake activity, confirmed the tremor hit at Korumburra, about 90km southeast of Melbourne, about 4.30pm.

It has been felt in Broadford, Coldstream, Caulfield, West Heidelberg, Heathmont, Richmond, North Sunshine, Cheltenham, Keysborough, South Gippsland and Patterson Lakes.

A Leongatha resident "Chris" told the Herald Sun, his office building shook and the lights went off.

“It was pretty scary,” he said.

The latest incident follows Victorians being shaken by an earthquake measuring 4.6 on the Richter Scale and spanning more than 200km on March 6.

In that earthquake, the epicentre hit just north of Korumburra in South Gippsland, but the earthquake was powerful enough to shake buildings and cause some residents to fall off their couches in metropolitan Melbourne.
Related Coverage

* Latest: Updates on Twitter

Twitter was abuzz with activity as of 4.58pm with users posting more than 60 tweets per minute.

Many were just trying to figure out the scale of the tremor however some missed it completely.

“Why do I never notice the Earthquakes in Melbourne? I must have good suspension LOL - Funny!” said @peterfletcher.

“How AWESOME just felt a minor earthquake, wasnt sure what it was. Was just confirmed on the news,” said @Angelism333.

“Seeing a lot of reports that the #earthquake was weaker this time. It was actually STRONGER in a few northeastern suburbs,” said @skenasis.

*******************
Australia is not having a good time with earthquakes, floods, major fires, oil spills, crocodile and sharks attacking humans and mass whale beachings..... whats going on?
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