Welcome Guest [Log In] [Register]
Welcome to Free Thinkers!

Log in, register an account, or post as a guest.


Username:   Password:
Add Reply
Massive quake hits Japan; Major tsunami damage in northern Japan
Topic Started: Mar 11 2011, 02:06 AM (6,582 Views)
yass
Member Avatar
'night owl'
[ *  *  * ]
Extensive damage reported at S. Oregon harbor

March 12, 2011 6:44 PM

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon - March 11, 2011 - The Port of Brookings, following wave surges during a tsunami warning along the Oregon Coast. An 8.9-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan sent wave surges across the Pacific Ocean. Jamie Francis/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Crescent City, California - March 11, 2011 - Damage at the Port of Crescent City. An 8.9-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan sent wave surges across the Pacific Ocean. Jamie Francis/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Crescent City, California - March 11, 2011 - Damage at the Port of Crescent City. An 8.9-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan sent wave surges across the Pacific Ocean. Jamie Francis/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Crescent City, California - March 11, 2011 - Damage at the Port of Crescent City. An 8.9-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan sent wave surges across the Pacific Ocean. Jamie Francis/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Crescent City, California - March 11, 2011 - Damage at the Port of Crescent City. An 8.9-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan sent wave surges across the Pacific Ocean. Jamie Francis/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Crescent City, California - March 11, 2011 - Damage at the Port of Crescent City. An 8.9-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Japan sent wave surges across the Pacific Ocean. Jamie Francis/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/11/11-- A boat lies submerged in the commercial boat harbor in Brookings after the city's harbors were hit with powerful waves from a tsunami Friday, following an earthquake that shook Japan. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/11/11-- Many docks in the commercial boat harbor in Brookings were torn loose and wooden pilings broken, leaving boats adrift, after the city's harbors were hit with powerful waves from a tsunami Friday, following an earthquake that shook Japan. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/11/11-- A boat lies submerged in the commercial boat harbor in Brookings after the city's harbors were hit with powerful waves from a tsunami Friday, following an earthquake that shook Japan. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/11/11-- Many docks in the commercial boat harbor in Brookings were torn loose, leaving boats adrift, after the city's harbors were hit with powerful waves from a tsunami Friday, following an earthquake that shook Japan. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

continues, next post
-Love will lead
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
yass
Member Avatar
'night owl'
[ *  *  * ]
Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/11/11-- Robert Butson's 1929 92-foot schooner lies submerged after it broke free from its mooring and then sunk when a tsunami hit the Brookings Friday following an earthquake that shook Japan. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian


Posted Image

02/16/2011 -- Coos Bay, Ore., -- A pier that broke during tsunami swells Friday is tied to the dock at the Charleston Marina near Coos Bay. Michael Lloyd/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- The sky begins to brighten Saturday in the commercial harbor basin in Brookings where a tsunami Friday morning broke apart docks that used to extend across the harbor. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- The sky begins to brighten Saturday in the commercial harbor basin in Brookings where a tsunami Friday morning broke apart docks that used to extend across the harbor. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- Clay Mansur, of Four M Tackle in Brookings, takes a phone call early Saturday morning after a tsunami shut down his shop on Friday. Mansur said he first witnessed a tsunami in 1964, when he 11 year old, though he said he was out salmon fishing on the ocean and didn't realize at first that anything had happened. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- Locals gather early Saturday morning at Fley's Cafe and Laundromat, between the ocean and the Brookings' harbor, to rehash the detail of the tsunami swept in Friday, destroying docks and sinking boats. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- Locals gather early Saturday morning at Fley's Cafe and Laundromat, between the ocean and the Brookings' harbor, to rehash the detail of the tsunami swept in Friday, destroying docks and sinking boats. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- The sheen of oil is visible Saturday as crews worked to contain oil and clean up debris in the Brookings commercial boat basin where a tsunami swept in Friday, destroying docks and sinking boats. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- Bill Woods had a "tsunami" crab sale on Saturday in the commercial boat basin in Brookings where a tsunami swept in Friday, destroying docks and sinking boats. Woods took his crab boat out to sea on Friday and rode out the tsunami safely off-shore. Photo by Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

Posted Image

Brookings, Oregon--3/12/11-- Kyle Aubin, 25, waits aboard the Super-Star, a 43-ft commercial charter boat that swept out to sea in the tsunami that swept into Brookings harbor Friday. Aubin went out to sea on another charter boat and leapt over to the Super-Star to recover the boat. The Super-Star was set to pulled out of the water Saturday to be inspected for damage. Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian

More at http://photos.oregonlive.com/photo-essay/2011/03/southern_oregon_tsunami_damage.html
-Love will lead
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
yass
Member Avatar
'night owl'
[ *  *  * ]
Extensive damage reported at S. Oregon harbor

Posted: 03/11/2011 08:09:50 PM PST

BROOKINGS, Ore.—A tsunami wreaked havoc Friday at a Southwest Oregon harbor, prompted thousands of the state's coastal residents to head for higher ground, and swept four people out to sea, though they were soon rescued.

The harbor at Brookings, just north of the California border, saw the most destruction from the waves that reached Oregon following a giant earthquake off Japan.

"The port is in total disarray," Curry County Sheriff John Bishop said.

The half of the harbor that shelters commercial fishing boats was extensively damaged and up to 10 vessels sank, he said.

One man with a history of heart problems was found dead aboard a commercial vessel. It was unclear exactly how he died but it was likely from natural causes, Bishop said.

Four people who went to a beach north of Brookings at the mouth of the Pistol River to watch the waves were caught by them instead. Two rescued themselves, and law enforcement officers and firefighters got the other two, the sheriff's office said.

Thousands of Oregonians heeded warning sirens in the early morning hours and headed for higher ground. They got the all-clear late in the morning to return home.

In most cases, there was little damage from the surges that raised waves as much as 3 feet at Port Orford on the southern coast, where the waves were the highest.

Surges continued at midday Friday at Brookings, the largest community in Curry County, with about 14,000 residents.

Three boats were sunk in the harbor and seven swept out to sea. All those may be sunk, Bishop said, but authorities were still getting reports from Coast Guard helicopters surveying the coast. More than half the dock structures were destroyed.

The man who was found dead was described as a "live-aboard" on the vessel, Bishop said. None of the vessels swept out to sea had people aboard, he said.

The tsunami hit hard at Curry County, where unemployment has been running at 13 percent through the Great Recession.

Like many Oregon counties, Curry has tried to make a transition from an economy based on timber and commercial fishing to one based on tourism, services for retirees and sport fishing.

"It's still a struggle," said Darrel Miller of Wild River Brewing & Pizza Co. on U.S. 101 above the harbor. Commercial fishing is still an important family business in town. "I know their families," Miller said. "When they get hit, we feel it."

Pat Piper, head of the local Chamber of Commerce, owns a bookstore at the edge of the harbor—she had to fetch the store's cat at 6:30 a.m.

The recreational boating side of the harbor wasn't hurt so badly, and all the business buildings at the harbor are intact, she said. "I don't think it's going to hurt the tourist economy. ... We're just grateful it wasn't worse," she said.

Gov. John Kitzhaber appeared at a news conference Friday with Brig. Gen. Mike Caldwell, the head of the Oregon National Guard. They said the state's emergency plan and the evacuations went well, although some sirens failed to go off automatically and had to be sounded manually.

State geologist Vicki McConnell warned that Oregon faces the risk of a similar quake much closer to home, with notice of a half-hour or less, in an unstable area just off the Oregon coast called a subduction zone.

That warning was echoed by marine geologist Chris Goldfinger of Oregon State University, who was in Tokyo and meeting with fellow seismologists when the earthquake struck.

The Japanese have been living with and preparing for earthquakes for thousands of years, he said. Grim as it was, the earthquake's impact could have been far greater, he said.

By contrast, he said, the jeopardy confronting the Pacific Northwest has only dawned on it in the past two decades.

Americans are decades behind in preparing and executing emergency plans, reinforcing buildings against quakes and taking other steps to prevent catastrophe, Goldfinger said.

"This event looks to be an identical twin to the one we expect in the Pacific Northwest," he said in a telephone interview from Japan. "If it were to happen today in the Pacific Northwest, it wouldn't turn out so well."

http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_17597470
-Love will lead
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Deleted User
Deleted User

WIO, YOU SAID:
" site of the japanese nuclear reactors.. what happens if we have a cme? same thing probably..
ah ho wio "
= NO WAY JOSE - JAPAN GOT A TOTALLY DIFFERENt KARMA...
yakuza means california
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakuza
http://www.ucpress.edu/book.php?isbn=9780520215627
http://books.google.ro/books?id=W1vi31vifg0C&pg=PA302&lpg=PA302&dq=yakuza+california&source=bl&ots=A1h3wf1wRp&sig=ouUZrECOMwLzyRBtzIRHR0bSl-0&hl=ro&ei=SG1-TbbtNs_wsgbh_dnkBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10&ved=0CGgQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=yakuza%20california&f=false
!!!

DIVYNE IS WITH YOU

Quote Post Goto Top
 
epona
Member Avatar
Advanced Member
[ *  *  * ]
I came across this VERY interesting article at educate yourself re what CAUSED the quake, which has not been removed!

Quake cause, quake analysis

Ok Wio, there are plenty of numbers for you to analyze too!
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Go to Next Page
« Previous Topic · General Discussion · Next Topic »
Add Reply

Cooper Blue created by SlyCooperFan1 from Outline & ZNR