Showing posts with label flickr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flickr. Show all posts

Friday, September 03, 2010

Christchurch earthquake pictures


Christchurch earthquake
Originally uploaded by johnstewartnz.
(way down at the bottom are quake preparedness commentary and a video)

Earthquake!

Earthquake!
(Look at that vertical displacement!)
(edit: A couple of friends have since reminded me that "displacement" is a specific geologic term with regard to quakes. This offset might not be ground displacement as much as separation due to liquefaction or localized sinking.)

Earthquake!

Earthquake!

Earthquake!
(above photos by digitalsadhu

Christchurch earthquake

Christchurch earthquake

Christchurch earthquake

Christchurch earthquake
(above photos by John Stewart

Christchurch Earthquake Works a mess

Christchurch Earthquake Works a mess
(above photos by Brendan Gloistein


After I looked at these, I reminded my husband that we haven't replaced the attachment hardware for our bookshelves, so we'll do that this weekend.

We also need to re-inventory our quake kit and find out what we need to replace. My favorite list of supplies is sfgate.com.

Folks from Christchurch respond to last night's big quake:



The panicky woman couldn't have known then (and many folks don't know, in general) that the quake wasn't really big enough for a tsunami, especially given as it was centered under land. They're usually from bigger quakes centered under water, with specific seismological conditions. But when the ground has bounced you out of bed in the wee hours of a winter's morning, that's probably not your first thought.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Around the world

Found via Design is Mine, a gorgeous collection of globular glory.




I spent hundreds of hours in my childhood poring over globes. I loved the relief globes best, ours at home was worn over the Alps and Andes and Himalaya and Rockies where I'd run the tip of my index finger over the ridges time and time again. I'm currently smitten with a globe I saw in a catalog a couple of years ago that has your basic political map on it until the light inside is turned on, when it becomes a star map. Our local plastic-epoxy-and-stuff store, mostly used by sign-makers and fiberglass-molders, sells inflatable globes that are only so much vinyl and poppable, disposable stuff, and what would I do with one? But I want one.

I think my favorite globe-fact, over my life, has been that if the relief on my favorite kind of globe were true scale, I wouldn't be able to feel them.