Image behind is not by Kulshan Grandfather Stan G. Webb – In Retirement © ™ ® and may be subject to copyright. Grumpy old men and raging grannies are mad as hell. So loud. So rude. So intrusive. Such theft. Such invasion of our privacy. Did these children never get a lesson in deportment and respect. Granny Darkly ® © TM is all of us and no one at all. She represents all of us acting independently from multiple platforms all over the place. We are silver tip and mad as hell.
Be Careful Out There
Learn more about the Cascadia Volcanic Arc © ™ ® (Part of Pacific Ring of Fire) Cascadia Volcanoes © ™ ® and the currently active Mount Meager massif © ™ ® , part of the Cascadia Volcanic Arc © ™ ® [ash flow, debris flows, fumaroles, lahars and hot springs], just northwest of Pemberton and Whistler, Canada ~ My personal interest in the Mount Meager massif © ™ ® is that the last volcanic vent blew north, into the Bridge River Valley [The Bridge River Valley Community Association (BRVCA), [formerly Bridge River Valley Economic Development Society], near my hometown. I am the Man From Minto © ™ ® - A Prospector Who Knows His Rocks And Stuff © ™ ®
I experienced my first magnitude 7.0-7.5 earthquake when I was 22 months old. It almost knocked me to the ground. That 1946 Vancouver Island earthquake struck Vancouver Island on June 23 at 10:15 a.m.[1] with a magnitude estimated at 7.0 Ms[2] and 7.5 Mw.[6] The main shock epicenter occurred in the Forbidden Plateau area northwest of Courtenay. While most of the large earthquakes in the Vancouver area occur at tectonic plate boundaries, the 1946 Vancouver Island earthquake was a crustal event. Shaking was felt from Portland, Oregon, to Prince Rupert, British Columbia. This is one of the most damaging earthquakes in the history of British Columbia, but damage was restricted because there were no heavily populated areas near the epicentre, where severe shaking occurred. There were, however, a whole series of landslides in the Forbidden Plateau area there were a whole series of landslides blocked streams and rivers to create lakes. The first hikers into the area gave them great names, Landslide Lake, Rock Fall Lake, Earthquake Lake etc.; over time these natural dams were eroded to nothing, leaving nothing but fading memories of those lakes. This earthquake is Canada's largest historic onshore earthquake.[1]
Three years later, an earthquake, an M8.1, struck at 8:01 p.m. PDT on August 2, 1949 in Haida Gwaii [formerly Queen Charlotte Islands], an interplate earthquake that occurred on the ocean bottom just off the west coast of the main south island [Graham Island]. The shock had a surface wave magnitude of 8.1 and a maximum Mercalli Intensity of VIII (Severe).
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Earthquake Drill
3rd Thursday in October 19, 2023 at 10:20 AM Pacific
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