Quakeland: On the Road to America’s Next Devastating Earthquake: Revelation 6

Quakeland: On the Road to America’s Next Devastating Earthquake

Roger BilhamQuakeland: New York and the Sixth Seal (Revelation 6:12)

Given recent seismic activity — political as well as geological — it’s perhaps unsurprising that two books on earthquakes have arrived this season. One is as elegant as the score of a Beethoven symphony; the other resembles a diary of conversations overheard during a rock concert. Both are interesting, and both relate recent history to a shaky future.

Journalist Kathryn Miles’s Quakeland is a litany of bad things that happen when you provoke Earth to release its invisible but ubiquitous store of seismic-strain energy, either by removing fluids (oil, water, gas) or by adding them in copious quantities (when extracting shale gas in hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking, or when injecting contaminated water or building reservoirs). To complete the picture, she describes at length the bad things that happen during unprovoked natural earthquakes. As its subtitle hints, the book takes the form of a road trip to visit seismic disasters both past and potential, and seismologists and earthquake engineers who have first-hand knowledge of them. Their colourful personalities, opinions and prejudices tell a story of scientific discovery and engineering remedy.

Miles poses some important societal questions. Aside from human intervention potentially triggering a really damaging earthquake, what is it actually like to live in neighbourhoods jolted daily by magnitude 1–3 earthquakes, or the occasional magnitude 5? Are these bumps in the night acceptable? And how can industries that perturb the highly stressed rocks beneath our feet deny obvious cause and effect? In 2015, the Oklahoma Geological Survey conceded that a quadrupling of the rate of magnitude-3 or more earthquakes in recent years, coinciding with a rise in fracking, was unlikely to represent a natural process. Miles does not take sides, but it’s difficult for the reader not to.

She visits New York City, marvelling at subway tunnels and unreinforced masonry almost certainly scheduled for destruction by the next moderate earthquake in the vicinity. She considers the perils of nuclear-waste storage in Nevada and Texas, and ponders the risks to Idaho miners of rock bursts — spontaneous fracture of the working face when the restraints of many million years of confinement are mined away. She contemplates the ups and downs of the Yellowstone Caldera — North America’s very own mid-continent supervolcano — and its magnificently uncertain future. Miles also touches on geothermal power plants in southern California’s Salton Sea and elsewhere; the vast US network of crumbling bridges, dams and oil-storage farms; and the magnitude 7–9 earthquakes that could hit California and the Cascadia coastline of Oregon and Washington state this century. Amid all this doom, a new elementary school on the coast near Westport, Washington, vulnerable to inbound tsunamis, is offered as a note of optimism. With foresight and much persuasion from its head teacher, it was engineered to become an elevated safe haven.

Miles briefly discusses earthquake prediction and the perils of getting it wrong (embarrassment in New Madrid, Missouri, where a quake was predicted but never materialized; prison in L’Aquila, Italy, where scientists failed to foresee a devastating seismic event) and the successes of early-warning systems, with which electronic alerts can be issued ahead of damaging seismic waves. Yes, it’s a lot to digest, but most of the book obeys the laws of physics, and it is a engaging read. One just can’t help wishing that Miles’s road trips had taken her somewhere that wasn’t a disaster waiting to happen.

Catastrophic damage in Anchorage, Alaska, in 1964, caused by the second-largest earthquake in the global instrumental record.

In The Great Quake, journalist Henry Fountain provides us with a forthright and timely reminder of the startling historical consequences of North America’s largest known earthquake, which more than half a century ago devastated southern Alaska. With its epicentre in Prince William Sound, the 1964 quake reached magnitude 9.2, the second largest in the global instrumental record. It released more energy than either the 2004 Sumatra–Andaman earthquake or the 2011 Tohoku earthquake off Japan; and it generated almost as many pages of scientific commentary and description as aftershocks. Yet it has been forgotten by many.

The quake was scientifically important because it occurred at a time when plate tectonics was in transition from hypothesis to theory. Fountain expertly traces the theory’s historical development, and how the Alaska earthquake was pivotal in nailing down one of the most important predictions. The earthquake caused a fjordland region larger than England to subside, and a similarly huge region of islands offshore to rise by many metres; but its scientific implications were not obvious at the time. Eminent seismologists thought that a vertical fault had slipped, drowning forests and coastlines to its north and raising beaches and islands to its south. But this kind of fault should have reached the surface, and extended deep into Earth’s mantle. There was no geological evidence of a monster surface fault separating these two regions, nor any evidence for excessively deep aftershocks. The landslides and liquefied soils that collapsed houses, and the tsunami that severely damaged ports and infrastructure, offered no clues to the cause.

“Previous earthquakes provide clear guidance about present-day vulnerability.” The hero of The Great Quake is the geologist George Plafker, who painstakingly mapped the height reached by barnacles lifted out of the intertidal zone along shorelines raised by the earthquake, and documented the depths of drowned forests. He deduced that the region of subsidence was the surface manifestation of previously compressed rocks springing apart, driving parts of Alaska up and southwards over the Pacific Plate. His finding confirmed a prediction of plate tectonics, that the leading edge of the Pacific Plate plunged beneath the southern edge of Alaska along a gently dipping thrust fault. That observation, once fully appreciated, was applauded by the geophysics community.

Fountain tells this story through the testimony of survivors, engineers and scientists, interweaving it with the fascinating history of Alaska, from early discovery by Europeans to purchase from Russia by the United States in 1867, and its recent development. Were the quake to occur now, it is not difficult to envisage that with increased infrastructure and larger populations, the death toll and price tag would be two orders of magnitude larger than the 139 fatalities and US$300-million economic cost recorded in 1964.

What is clear from these two books is that seismicity on the North American continent is guaranteed to deliver surprises, along with unprecedented economic and human losses. Previous earthquakes provide clear guidance about the present-day vulnerability of US infrastructure and populations. Engineers and seismologists know how to mitigate the effects of future earthquakes (and, in mid-continent, would advise against the reckless injection of waste fluids known to trigger earthquakes). It is merely a matter of persuading city planners and politicians that if they are tempted to ignore the certainty of the continent’s seismic past, they should err on the side of caution when considering its seismic future.

The Iranian Horn Threatens Israel

Senior IRGC General Mohammad-Reza Naghdi during a meeting with Iran’s ruler Ali Khamenei  (undated)

Senior IRGC General Mohammad-Reza Naghdi during a meeting with Iran’s ruler Ali Khamenei

Revolutionary Guard Commander Says Israel’s Destruction Is Near

Author: Mardo Soghom

IranConflict – Military

The instructor of Zionists in espionage, terror, sabotage is Satan, “this is their millennia-old profession,” a senior commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard says.

Gen. Mohammad-Reza Naghdi, speaking Sunday to Fars news agency controlled by the IRGC, made the anti-Semitic remark amid a torrent of daily attacks by Islamic Republic officials against Israel.

The renewed rhetoric began just a few weeks after Iran concluded an agreement with Saudi Arabia to restore diplomatic relations and according to Israeli officials, instigated attacks by Palestinians in early April.

Naghdi, who is a deputy to IRGC’s chief commander, went on to say that while Satan guides the Zionists, Iran’s regime “is led by saints” and its mission is to inspire light in the hearts of men. “Some have been awakened” and even voluntarily provide top-secret information to the Islamic Republic.

“Sometimes they are shocked how the Iranians found a particular secret,” he said. “They search and search again for a spy and cannot find one, unbeknownst to them that many of their personnel are cooperating out of conviction.”

Naghdi, like many other IRGC officers, is adept at propaganda, having been raised in a religious milieu where fantastic stories are told and told again to build faith in the Shiite ideology. However, faced with multiple crises regime officials seem to have resorted more intensely to twisting reality to justify their policies or deflect criticism.

Gen. Mohammad-Reza Naghdi, the coordinating deputy to IRGC commander-in-chief (center)

Gen. Mohammad-Reza Naghdi, the coordinating deputy to IRGC commander-in-chief (center)

Recently, a leaked audio recording showed how an intelligence official used bizarre and conspiratorial statements in a speech to try to explain away multiple problems the regime faces.

In fact, since July 2020, evidence has piled up that Israel has deeply penetrated Iran’s security barriers and has succeeded in major sabotage operations against nuclear and military targets. The regime in Tehran and particularly the IRGC have lost face after telling the people for four decades that they are very strong in security and military spheres.

Their myth shattered, their failures in the economic sphere now loom even larger. The economy is in tatters and tens of millions of Iranians have sunk into poverty. Last year, the regime faced the most intense protests in its four-decade history, and large-scale unrest can resume at any moment.

Naghdi claimed that last year 10,000 attacks took place against Israel, taking credit for standing behind what the regime calls “the resistance front.”

“This is the revenge of the Islamic Revolution; the destruction of the Zionist regime,” he said.

Naghdi also echoed statements by other senior officials in the past few days that Israel’s power of deterrence has been broken and not only it is unable to intimidate Iran, but also it can no longer deter the Hezbollah and Palestinian militants.

He also claimed that the Islamic Republic has almost driven out the United States from the region, highlighting the US defeat in Afghanistan and the hasty withdrawal.

“They escaped from Afghanistan and most of them also escaped from Iraq and the rest will also leave. They have been defeated, and this trend will continue,” Naghdi claimed. He also mocked the US and Britain for not being able to do anything when their servicemen were detained by the Revolutionary Guard, in 2016 and 2007 respectively.

Claiming that people throughout the world follow the ideology of Iran’s regime, Naghdi asked, “In which era in history we, or any other country, had such an influence? I have estimated that daily 100,000 experts wake up, go to work, get paid in different countries just to overthrow the Islamic Republic regime…”

Biden must be able to control ‘nuclear weapon’ threats from Russia and China

US President must be able to control ‘nuclear weapon’ threats from Russia and China

12 hours ago

Curtin University Political Analyst Professor Joe Siracusa says Russia and China pushing a nuclear arms race requires a president who can control the number of “nuclear weapons” coming through.

“Russia and China have signalled a new nuclear arms race … we’re going to need a president who can control the number of nuclear weapons that are coming back and there will be many of them,” Professor Siracusa told Sky News Australia.

Killing of Indian soldiers will increase risk for First Nuclear War: Revelation 8

A security personnel pays tribute to the Army soldiers who lost their lives in the Poonch terror attack, in Rajouri, Friday | ANI
A security personnel pays tribute to the Army soldiers who lost their lives in the Poonch terror attack, in Rajouri, Friday | ANI

Poonch killing of Indian soldiers shows jihad will increase India-Pakistan war risk

There have been dozens of terrorist attacks in Jammu & Kashmir’s Pir Panjal since 2021. It shows how unstable the peace on the Line of Control is.

PRAVEEN SWAMI

23 April, 2023 09:06 am IST

Leaving behind his beloved four-year-old son, and the primary school students at the Falah-e-Aam primary school in Doda, Jammu and Kashmir, Tariq Ahmad Wani had begun his journey to the graveyard on the hill. Following his training in 1993, Wani returned across the Line of Control to take charge of building a jihadist presence in Rajouri, Poonch and Doda, the Pir Panjal range along Kashmir’s southern fringe. In the forests above the remote town of Gulabgarh, Wani began hosting the Lashkar-e-Taiba sent in to wage a ruthless campaign of ethnic cleansing.

Following a firefight with Indian soldiers on 20 April 1996, Wani’s body was carried in procession to the Mazar-e-Shuhada, the so-called martyr’s graveyard, in Farrukhabad, on the outskirts of his home town, according to police records.

The lethal ambush, which claimed the lives of five Indian soldiers on the lonely road to Bhimber Gali in Poonch district last week, took place on the anniversary of Wani’s death, encrypted social media platforms linked to Lashkar recorded.

Four years ago, the killing of 40 Indian paramilitary police personnel in a suicide-attack at Pulwama pushed New Delhi to unleash missiles across the Line of Control, leading India and Pakistan to the edge of war. Terrorist groups Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad have since been reined in by Pakistan, and foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto’s visit is expected in New Delhi next month—but attacks across the Line of Control have continued.

Ever since the execution-style killing of five sleeping soldiers near Chamrer in 2021, and four more in subsequent combing operations, there have been more than a dozen terrorist attacks on the Pir Panjal. These have included a suicide attack on an army outpost, multiple grenade attacks and bombings, as well as an attempted massacre of Hindu villagers. Ease of terrorist operation across the Line of Control has been enhanced by the thinning out of troops, necessitated by the crisis in Ladakh.

The violence shows just how unstable the peace on the Line of Control in fact is. Facing a historically-unprecedented economic meltdown, and savage jihadist violence by the Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP), Islamabad knows it can’t risk war. The country’s military, though, has been telling India in covert talks that it is owed political concessions on Kashmir in return for ensuring low levels of violence in the region after 2019.

For its part, convinced that time is on its side in Kashmir, India sees no reason to make political concessions.

Learning from the Balakot crisis that the abyss can be closer than imagined, both sides have maintained a kind of grim peace. The deadlock, though, is more unstable than it seems.


The low-dose jihad

Late in the summer of 2005, a small group of friends and family gathered at Abdul Salam’s home in the south Kashmir village of Kadder to witness the marriage of his stepdaughter, Shabbira Kuchay. The colour and local custom, which marks rural Kashmiri weddings, was conspicuous by its absence, a guest present there told ThePrint. Following a brief religious ceremony conducted by the village cleric, a few dates were handed out to the guests. Then, the groom disappeared into the darkness—without his new bride.

The husband who disappeared—Sajid Saifullah Jatt—also known as Sajid Langda, or Sajid the Lame—commands Lashkar operations like the Bhimber Gali attack from a dairy farm near Lahore, Indian intelligence officials say.

Together with Mohammad Qasim, a one-time resident of the village of Angrela near Mahore, Sajid has built networks around small-time criminals and cross-border narcotics traffickers. Instead of sustaining operational units deep inside Kashmir, the operations rely on highly-trained Lashkar commandos to stage attacks near the Line of Control. Following each recent operation, the attackers have rapidly exfiltrated back into Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.

Lashkar commanders have long experience of this kind of low-grade warfare. Faced with international pressure, and wary of ending up at war with India, General Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan’s former military ruler, had ordered a ceasefire along the Line of Control and curtailed the activities of jihadist groups in Pakistan. The militant organisation Hizb-ul-Mujahideen, divided over secret peace talks with Indian intelligence, fractured. The jihadist movement almost collapsed.

Through ethnic Kashmiri jihadists Muhammad Abbas Sheikh, the 1975-born son of a small peasant who worked as a roadside tailor in southern Kashmir’s Qaimoh, Sajid focussed on setting up local networks of support and recruitment.

Early in 2007, Shabbira and Sajid fled to Pakistan ahead of a police raid, leaving behind their two-week-old child. Now a teenager, their son Umar Raja Afaq, still lives in the family home in Kulgam. The networks Sajid had set up also thrived.


Also read: Imran Khan is promising Islamic utopia to Pakistanis. It might compel the military to return


Fragile deterrence

From 2014, these networks were to become critical to Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate, as it began crafting a response to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to retaliate against terrorism by escalating shelling across the Line of Control. In 2015, Jaish-e-Muhammad fidayeen struck in Gurdaspur, following up with attacks on the Pathankot air base and an army brigade headquarters in Uri in 2016. Furious, India struck back with cross-Line of Control strikes—but the ISI chose to raise the stakes.

Even though the 2016 strikes ended jihadist attacks outside Kashmir, Jaish-e-Muhammad fidayeen units struck at military bases in Nagrota and Sunjwan as well as a CRPF training centre in Lethpora. Former chief of defence staff General Bipin Rawat began publicly advocating for more strikes across the Line of Control in September 2018, five months before Pulwama.

Few authoritative accounts have emerged out of Pakistan’s decision to hit back across the Line of Control following India’s missile strike on Balakot—a move which led both countries to fear imminent escalation into nuclear war. Lieutenant-General Tariq Khan—former commander of Pakistan’s Mangla-based I Strike Corps—provides fascinating insights, though, in private messages. Islamabad, he argued, should “push the envelope of hostilities so that nuclear war is a likely outcome.”

Even though the prospect of conflict actually escalating to this point was low, General Tariq noted, the risk of escalation would itself serve as a deterrent. That it was “a mindset and never a tangible posture.”

“It is an outcome of a possibility,” he said.

Tough questions

Former army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa saw India and Pakistan both slowly pulling back from the edge, with secret diplomacy eventually leading to a ceasefire in 2021. The ceasefire, though, has become caught up in Pakistani politics, with former prime minister Imran Khan claiming Bajwa compelled him to keep the peace with India. Fearing Khan, prime minister Shehbaz Sharif has been reluctant to normalise ties with India, without securing some concessions on Kashmir.

The lessons India drew from the Balakot attack were also mixed, as scholar Rohan Mukherjee has noted. Even though the country demonstrated its resolve to retaliate against terrorism, he observes that Indian military power is “unable to dominate the escalation ladder”. Though Pakistan was shaken, India also came away with a bloodied nose.

Modi has since shown he’s acutely aware of the crippling costs of an India-Pakistan conflict. Leave aside cross-Line of Control strikes, he has even avoided harsh polemic in the wake of attacks since 2021. As elections near, though, this restraint could become harder to sustain—especially if a terrorist attack ends up claiming a large number of lives.

As elections near in both countries, the Bhimber Gali ambush shows that the risk of war—by missteps and miscalculations—will escalate.

The author is National Security Editor, ThePrint. He tweets @praveenswami. Views are personal. Views are personal. 

(Edited by Ratan Priya)

Russia Prepares Her Nuclear Horn: Daniel 7

Belarus Units Complete Training on Russian Tactical Nuclear Missile Systems

Saturday, 22 April, 2023 – 17:30

Russian Iskander-E missile launcher operates during International Military and Technical Forum 2022 in Alabino outside Moscow, Russia August 17, 2022. (Reuters)

Asharq Al-Awsat

Units from Belarus returned home from Russia on Saturday after training on how to use the Iskander tactical missile system to launch nuclear weapons, the Belarusian defense ministry said.

It made the announcement exactly four weeks after President Vladimir Putin said Russia would station tactical nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus, sending a warning to NATO over its military support for Ukraine.

In early February, Belarus said its armed forces were in autonomous control of Iskander mobile guided missile systems that Russia had already provided.

But when the units were sent to Russia on April 4 for additional training, Minsk made clear their sessions would include study of “the maintenance and use of tactical nuclear warheads of the Iskander missile defense system”.

Those units returned to Belarus on Saturday, the defense ministry said on Telegram.

Russia has not given a clear timetable for moving tactical nuclear weapons to Belarus, but Putin said the construction of storage facilities should be complete by the start of July.

It will be the first deployment of part of Russia’s nuclear arsenal outside its borders since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Palestinian groups condemn Israeli forces’ storming outside the Temple Walls: Revelation 11

Yehya Al-Sinwar, Gaza Strip chief of the Palestinian Hamas movement, speaks during a rally to mark the annual al-Quds Day (Jerusalem Day), Gaza, Palestine, April 14, 2023. (Reuters Photo)

Palestinian groups condemn Israeli forces’ storming of Al-Aqsa

BY ANADOLU AGENCY

 GAZA CITY, PALESTINE APR 23, 2023 – 11:05 AM GMT+3

Yehya Al-Sinwar, Gaza Strip chief of the Palestinian Hamas movement, speaks during a rally to mark the annual al-Quds Day (Jerusalem Day), Gaza, Palestine, April 14, 2023. (Reuters Photo)

View of a Jewish Settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank in this undated file photo. (Shutterstock File Photo)

Palestinians, Israelis attend iftar in West Bank to boost dialogue

WEST-BANK

Leading Palestinian factions Hamas and Islamic Jihad have strongly denounced the Israeli military’s operation at the Bab al-Rahma prayer area of Al-Aqsa Mosque, which is located in East Jerusalem and under Israeli occupation.

Palestinian media reports said Israeli forces damaged light fixtures and electrical systems during the raid on Saturday, which came as Muslims celebrate Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

Hazim Qasim, a spokesperson for Hamas, said the raid was a continuation of Israel’s “religious war against the holy sites in Jerusalem.”

The struggle to preserve the “Arab-Islamic identity” of Al-Aqsa Mosque will continue undeterred, he said in a written statement.

Islamic Jihad spokesperson Tarek Silmi said the raid was yet another aggression in Israel’s “war on Al-Aqsa Mosque.”

“Attempts by the (Israeli) occupation administration to take control of the mosque will never succeed,” he asserted.

Earlier this month, Israeli forces stormed the Al-Aqsa Mosque complex and forcibly removed Muslim worshippers, escalating tensions across the Palestinian territories.

The raids triggered rocket fire from the Gaza Strip and Lebanon, while Israel retaliated with airstrikes.

For Muslims, Al-Aqsa represents the world’s third-holiest site. Jews call the area the Temple Mount, saying it was the site of two ancient Jewish temples.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. It annexed the entire city in 1980, a move never recognized by the international community.

3.6 earthquake before the Sixth Seal: Revelation 6

OVERVIEW | QUAKE DATA | INTERACTIVE MAP | NEW: SEISMOGRAMS | USER REPORTS | EARLIER QUAKES HERE | QUAKES IN THE US | NEW YORK | WASHINGTON DCLight mag. 3.6 earthquake - 9.5 mi southwest of Watertown, Jefferson County, New York, USA, on Sunday, Apr 23, 2023 at 2:10 pm (GMT -4)

Light mag. 3.6 earthquake – 9.5 mi southwest of Watertown, Jefferson County, New York, USA, on Sunday, Apr 23, 2023 at 2:10 pm (GMT -4)

Updated: Apr 23, 2023 19:36 GMT – 28 minutes ago

I felt this quake

Light magnitude 3.6 earthquake at 9 km depth

23 Apr 18:12 UTCFirst to report: VolcanoDiscovery after 2 minutes.
23 Apr 18:25: Now using data updates from USGS

Update Sun, 23 Apr 2023, 18:17

Seismic-like event, possible earthquake, reported few minutes ago near Napanee, Ontario, Canada

We are receiving unverified early reports of ground shaking possibly caused by seismic activity in or near Napanee, Ontario, Canada on 23 Apr 2023 (GMT) at approximately 18:09 GMT.
There are no details yet on the magnitude or depth of this possible quake. If confirmed, we can expect more accurate data to emerge in the next few minutes. The location, magnitude and time mentioned are indicative, based on our best-fit seismic model. They are temporary until our AllQuakes monitoring service receives more exact scientific data from a national or international seismological agency. Check back here shortly and stay safe.

If you were or still are in this area during the quake help others with your feedback and report it here.

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Earthquake details

Date & timeApr 23, 2023 18:10:08 UTC – 1 hour 54 minutes ago
Local time at epicenterSunday, Apr 23, 2023 at 2:10 pm (GMT -4)
StatusConfirmed
Magnitude3.6
Depth8.9 km
Epicenter latitude / longitude43.8641°N / 76.0232°W  (JeffersonNew YorkUnited States)
Antipode43.864°S / 103.977°E
Shaking intensityWeak shaking
Felt782 reports
Primary data sourceUSGS (United States Geological Survey)
Nearby towns and cities1 km (1 mi) WNW of Adams Center (pop: 1,570) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
15 km (9 mi) SW of Watertown (pop: 26,800) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
30 km (19 mi) SW of Fort Drum (pop: 13,000) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
33 km (20 mi) N of Richland (pop: 5,660) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
60 km (37 mi) NE of Chonaquen (pop: 17,800) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
77 km (48 mi) N of Cicero (pop: 31,600) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
91 km (57 mi) N of Syracuse (pop: 144,100) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
559 km (347 mi) N of Washington (District of Columbia) (pop: 601,700) | Show on map | Quakes nearby
Weather at epicenter at time of quakeFew Clouds  10.5°C (51 F), humidity: 73%, wind: 6 m/s (12 kts) from WSW
Estimated seismic energy released1.6 x 1010 joules (4.4 megawatt hours, equivalent to 3.79 tons of TNT) | about seismic energy