Monday, July 25, 2011

WELS Rock N. Roll High School.
Built On a Fault


MS Word 2003 version:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/34974726/earthquake.doc


PDF:
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/34974726/earthquake.pdf
















5 comments:

Brett Meyer said...

Although comprehensive, the study fails to mention the most dangerous fault running right through the Lutheran Synods, UOJ, initial depth readings using Scripture and the Book of Concord prove that it's depth goes to Hell for an eternity with many falling into it every day. The Elsinore Fault may take your life, the UOJ Fault will steal your soul.

One Eponymous Archon said...

Dear Dr. Jackson,

Thank you for this in-depth study. Since I'm in the general area, it is very interesting to me. It must have been very time-consuming. It especially reminds me of the local sandcastle-building competition held yesterday down at Imperial Beach here in San Diego. CALHS, like much of the WELS today, is built on sand - the sand of UOJ and CGM - truly, a deadly combination. And like the grasshopper, fiddling away as the snow begins to fly, the people in Watertown will spend this week clapping and slapping themselves on the back for being such a wonderful church body, while the nasty rot of false doctrine and practice eats away at their insides. Soon, the fatal waves of pietism and Arminianism will come crashing down on their house of sand! But what do I know, I'm just -

One Eponymous Archon

bruce-church said...

I stopped by the Icha-blog tonight and saw that 6 out 9 visitors were from the California-Arizona district, no doubt to read the quake entries:

West Terre Haute, Indiana
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Corona, California (by Riverside/LA)
Mountain View, California (by San Jose/SF)
Sierra Vista, Arizona (near Tucson)
Phoenix, Arizona
Temecula, California (San Diego)
Hartford, Wisconsin
Los Angeles, California

bruce-church said...

I came across this web page that verifies the earthquake/flood report on the town of Wildomar in Riverside County, CA. It says Wildomar experiences 2898% greater earthquake activity than the average US city, and 3.5 times as many natural disasters as the average US county, usually by fire and floods:

http://www.city-data.com/city/Wildomar-California.html

The number of natural disasters in Riverside County (42) is a lot greater than the US average (12).

Earthquake activity:
Wildomar-area historical earthquake activity is above California state average. It is 2898% greater than the overall U.S. average.

On 6/28/1992 at 11:57:34, a magnitude 7.6 (6.2 MB, 7.6 MS, 7.3 MW, Depth: 0.7 mi, Class: Major, Intensity: VIII - XII) earthquake occurred 57.8 miles away from Wildomar center, causing 3 deaths (1 shaking deaths, 2 other deaths) and 400 injuries, causing $100,000,000 total damage and $40,000,000 insured losses
On 10/16/1999 at 09:46:44, a magnitude 7.4 (6.3 MB, 7.4 MS, 7.2 MW, 7.3 ML) earthquake occurred 78.6 miles away from the city center
On 5/19/1940 at 04:36:40, a magnitude 7.2 (7.2 UK) earthquake occurred 94.1 miles away from the city center, causing $33,000,000 total damage
On 4/21/1918 at 22:32:30, a magnitude 6.8 (6.8 UK, Class: Strong, Intensity: VII - IX) earthquake occurred 17.5 miles away from Wildomar center
On 6/28/1992 at 15:05:30, a magnitude 6.9 (6.3 MB, 6.7 MS, 6.5 MW, 6.9 ME, Depth: 3.1 mi) earthquake occurred 53.6 miles away from the city center
On 1/17/1994 at 12:30:55, a magnitude 6.8 (6.4 MB, 6.8 MS, 6.7 MW, Depth: 11.4 mi) earthquake occurred 84.5 miles away from Wildomar center, causing 60 deaths (60 shaking deaths) and 7000 injuries
Magnitude types: body-wave magnitude (MB), energy magnitude (ME), local magnitude (ML), surface-wave magnitude (MS), moment magnitude (MW)

Natural disasters:
The number of natural disasters in Riverside County (42) is a lot greater than the US average (12).
Major Disasters (Presidential) Declared: 25
Emergencies Declared: 2

Causes of natural disasters: Fires: 22, Floods: 15, Storms: 7, Winter Storms: 6, Landslides: 5, Mudslides: 3, Floods: 2, Heavy Rain: 1, Storm: 1, Tornado: 1, Earthquake: 1, Flash Flood: 1, Freeze: 1, Hurricane: 1, Tropical Storm: 1 (Note: Some incidents may be assigned to more than one category).

bruce-church said...

A couple quakes along the Elsinore Fault zone in 2011. One was only 2.9 Richter, yet caused a surprising amount of shaking, probably due to people being located along the fault that unzipped, and due to the sediments that they built on that are found in the fault, just like at CA Lutheran HS:

A magnitude 2.9 earthquake occurred at 2:12 p.m. about four miles south-southwest of Lake Henshaw, causing a surprising amount of shaking in parts of east and north county, says the US Geological Survey.
https://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/oct/06/small-earthquake-widely-felt-north-county/

Magnitude 3.8 Earthquake rattles Lake Henshaw and Ramona area of SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA along the Elsinore Fault:
http://economy4abc.blogspot.com/2011/03/magnitude-38-earthquake-rattles-lake.html

The Elsinore Fault passes along the northeast shore of Lake Henshaw:

http://www.sdnhm.org/research/paleontology/sdfaults.html