http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 121250.htm
Careful, you might get subducted.
Need stronger deck screws
Moderator: Jesus H Christ
Need stronger deck screws
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
Re: Need stronger deck screws
Been hearing that shit for decades now. Yawn... wake me up when it kills me.
Although, Mt. Hood has been doing the "seismic swarm" thing for the last couple of weeks. It does that on an occasion, without consequence. But St Helens started getting swarms too -- in 1980, and in 2004. Last I checked, 1300 feet of mountain is still missing, and 57 people are still dead.
Mt Hood has erupted in the last 140 years... it doesn't take too much time off, traditionally. And if that sucker throws down a big lahar, unlike St Helens Mt Hood has a whole buncha people living both on it, and in the vallies below. They keep telling us that if that happened "it would be a natural disaster the likes of which this country has never seen."
Then again, they say the same about a 9.0+ hitting anywhere near the Portland area, which is built entirely on silt (except on the hillsides, aka "landslides). They've been telling us casualties could go deep into the 6-figures, depending on timing and whatsuch.
I've been here 42 years, ain't been a problem yet, and don't anticipate it will be. But I recently saw an article where this area is mecca for attracting the best and brightest geologists, since it's the most geologically active part of the country... so we'll have a buncha nerdy fucks saying "I told you so" when the Big One hits.
Although, Mt. Hood has been doing the "seismic swarm" thing for the last couple of weeks. It does that on an occasion, without consequence. But St Helens started getting swarms too -- in 1980, and in 2004. Last I checked, 1300 feet of mountain is still missing, and 57 people are still dead.
Mt Hood has erupted in the last 140 years... it doesn't take too much time off, traditionally. And if that sucker throws down a big lahar, unlike St Helens Mt Hood has a whole buncha people living both on it, and in the vallies below. They keep telling us that if that happened "it would be a natural disaster the likes of which this country has never seen."
Then again, they say the same about a 9.0+ hitting anywhere near the Portland area, which is built entirely on silt (except on the hillsides, aka "landslides). They've been telling us casualties could go deep into the 6-figures, depending on timing and whatsuch.
I've been here 42 years, ain't been a problem yet, and don't anticipate it will be. But I recently saw an article where this area is mecca for attracting the best and brightest geologists, since it's the most geologically active part of the country... so we'll have a buncha nerdy fucks saying "I told you so" when the Big One hits.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one