As predicted for the window of Jan. 13th- quakes above 6.0
98/01/12 10:14:07 31.01S 71.30W 33.0 6.2Ms A NEAR COAST OF CENTRAL CHILE
98/01/12 16:36:21 15.64S 179.66W 33.0 6.7Ms A FIJI ISLANDS REGION
To all the seismologists who read sci.geo.geology:
How often do 6.0+ quakes occur somewhere in the world?
-----
Scott A. Munro http://www.nextdim.com/users/smunro/
UFOs, Jack the Ripper, politics, fiction,
computer art, and other strange subjects.
Let the swines cry out for more
For that is their only road
From a blind spirit there is no proof
Where in smell they sleep aloof
My previous quatrains gave also a full explanation of what took place last few
days.
98/01/12 10:14:07 31.01S 71.30W 33.0 6.2Ms A NEAR COAST OF CENTRAL CHILE
98/01/12 16:36:21 15.64S 179.66W 33.0 6.7Ms A FIJI ISLANDS REGION
98/01/14 17:24:10 15.65S 179.44W 33.0 6.5Ms A FIJI ISLANDS REGION
Listen to my work on the national jeff Rense show Jan. 15th from 7.00 to 10.00
pm PT. Enjoy the show
Dr. Turi
Regards
James Root
.. I used to have a rock garden -- they all died.
___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12
Scott A. Munro <smu...@nextdim.com> wrote in article
<34bade1f...@news.nextdim.com>...
> To all the seismologists who read sci.geo.geology:
> How often do 6.0+ quakes occur somewhere in the world?
>
You would probably do better asking on sci.geo.earthquakes, but the answer
is roughly one every two or three days on average. However you can
sometimes get several close together, and also longer eq-free periods.
BTW, Turi's earthquake predictions have been extensively discussed and
debunked on that NG. His current batting average is very poor. From my
memory, someone calculated the probability for a 6.0+ in any 3-day period
worldwide as 57%.
--
Regards,
John.
hol...@smart.net.au
email copies of any replies would be appreciated.
>
>
>Scott A. Munro <smu...@nextdim.com> wrote in article
><34bade1f...@news.nextdim.com>...
>> To all the seismologists who read sci.geo.geology:
>> How often do 6.0+ quakes occur somewhere in the world?
>>
>You would probably do better asking on sci.geo.earthquakes,
Whoops! Missed that one.
>but the answer
>is roughly one every two or three days on average. However you can
>sometimes get several close together, and also longer eq-free periods.
As I suspected. Thanks.
>BTW, Turi's earthquake predictions have been extensively discussed and
>debunked on that NG. His current batting average is very poor. From my
>memory, someone calculated the probability for a 6.0+ in any 3-day period
>worldwide as 57%.
I just wanted to make sure that the people who read these groups
realized how "Dr." Turi's accuracy compared to chance.