OT - Earthquake in Turkey

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http://www.msnbc.com/news/334573.asp

ANKARA, Turkey, Nov. 12  A strong earthquake rocked western Turkey on Friday, collapsing buildings and injuring hundreds of people, Turkeys private NTV television reported. The quake measured 7.2 on the Richter Scale, not that much smaller than the 7.4 quake last August that killed more than 17,000 people.

Haven't seen this posted. Sorry if I missed it.

-- STFrancis (STFrancis@heaven.com), November 12, 1999

Answers

Earthquakes everywhere! Frequent and strong. Yikes.

-- Ashton & Leska in Cascadian subduction zone (allaha@earthlink.net), November 12, 1999.

A&L..don't make any sudden movements...

-- kritter (kritter@adelphia.net), November 12, 1999.

Has anyone seen any numbers yet for this year for disasters? It seems as though 1999 has to have been the worst year, in terms of lives and property lost, for disasters worldwife. We've had hurricanes, tornados, earthquakes, cyclones, etc. Just wondering how the numbers are adding up. Yikes, and we aren't even done with the year yet.

Jeannie

-- jhollander (hollander@ij.net), November 12, 1999.


Death toll rising...

-- Mad Monk (madmonk@hawaiian.net), November 12, 1999.

Plus this:

[ Fair Use: For Educational/Research Purposes Only ]

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/World/Americas/volcano121199.shtml

City of a million threatened by volcano

By Jan McGirk, Latin America Correspondent
12 November 1999

People in Quito are donning masks again as Guagua Pichincha volcano, seven miles from the Ecuadorean capital, belches ash, sulphur and gas.

Vulcanologists have posted "yellow alert" warnings on highways, indicating that the mountain, one of 31 active volcanoes in the country, could explode "imminently". Hours after thousands of pupils were evacuated from schools on Tuesday, the rumblings grew dramatically louder, while wind carried sooty grey particles from the crater and dumped them on the city of 1.2 million.

"We have to sweep it up," shrugged Quito's mayor, Roque Sevilla. Ever since the volcano started spewing smoke and particles on 7 October, city dwellers consider the ash more a nuisance than a hazard. It cannot be hosed away, because once it gets wet it blocks drains as effectively as cement.

Last month communities near the Tungurahua (Throat of Fire) volcano, 78 miles from Quito, were evacuated by government order. Recently police used tear-gas to deter villagers who pressed to return to their homes to retrieve belongings. Lava from the volcano could quickly turn the nearby town of Banos into another Pompeii.

Quito is not threatened by lava flows but a big upheaval of ash and rubble from Guagua Pichincha and subsequent mudslides and earthquakes put it at considerable risk. Hugo Yepez, of the Geophysical Institute, said it "has a higher level of energy" and predicted "a major explosion" was likely.
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-- Ashton & Leska in Cascadia (allaha@earthlink.net), November 12, 1999.



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