Edited by Coast, 22 February 2011 - 10:03 .
OLD THREAD STATER, INFO BELOW IS CURRENT
Big Earthquake In New Zealand
#1
Posted 03 September 2010 - 16:48
#2
Posted 22 February 2011 - 03:02
Low Temperature -11.0°C at 07:35 on 20th December 2010
Highest Daily Rainfall 77 mm (3.03 inches) on 10th August 2004
Highest Monthly Rainfall 287 mm (11.30 inches) in August 2004
#3
Posted 22 February 2011 - 04:02
On the pavement outside, there was an aftershock. The land was moving like it was alive. Four men carried a young girl to the hospital - she had a blue face so I fear the worse. People were crying, being hugged, desperately trying to contact loved ones on their mobile phones. We heard stories that office buildings had collapsed - later confirmed. We saw a dust cloud rise from parts of the city - it was either a fire or buildings collapsing.
After 15 minutes I left and started walking towards my car. The pavements are all buckled, kerb stones raised. The front of buildings have collapsed. You can hear sirens and car alarms. Water is coming up from the ground due to broken water mains. I cross Mortimer Square and people are sat around supporting each other.
I eventually get to my car and drive to Jake's school. There is liquidfied sand and water on the road. The school chapel is missing part of its walls and roof. The bridge over the stream is all buckled. All the pupils are on the school field. I sign my son out and drive via the side streets to Harewood in search of some diesel - I didn't have enough have get home. I find a garage so I fill up my car and drive home.
#4
Posted 22 February 2011 - 05:20
Max: 36C
Min: -12C
Max Wind Gust: 134 mph (!)
Ian McKellen on NZ: "Everything here is more magnificent. The landscape is familiar...but the vegetation is unusual and the mountains seem so much sharper. If you're looking for what the poets used to call 'the awful' - a sense of awe - that is what you find in New Zealand. And it's wild in a way that England isn't wild."
Lonely Planet on NZ: "few countries on this lonely planet as diverse, unspoiled and utterly, utterly photogenic" ; "the sun kicks like a mule".
New Zealand is the land of glaciers, rainforests, fjords, tussock plains, highlands, tablelands, mangroves, palms, golden sand beaches, snow capped mountains, volcanoes, earthquakes, wind, merino sheep, wine, olives, scorching sun, incessant rain, endless drought, flightless birds, dramatic coastlines, and the population of Scotland in a country the size of the UK. You need to visit. :)
#5
Posted 22 February 2011 - 06:27
Quote
Speaking on his arrival at Christchurch Mr Key said: "We may well be witnessing New Zealand's darkest day".
He said 180 police were working on the ground with an extra 200 on their way. There were also 350 military personnel there and another 250 on their way.
Forty members of an Australian urban search and rescue team were on their way from Australia and New Zealand had accepted help from America as well.
"We may be witnessing New Zealand's darkest day."
He described it as a "scene of utter devastation''.
The earthquake struck at a much worse time than the last one with more people were out on the streets this time.
"We will get through this. New Zealand will regroup, Christchurch will regroup."
Max: 36C
Min: -12C
Max Wind Gust: 134 mph (!)
Ian McKellen on NZ: "Everything here is more magnificent. The landscape is familiar...but the vegetation is unusual and the mountains seem so much sharper. If you're looking for what the poets used to call 'the awful' - a sense of awe - that is what you find in New Zealand. And it's wild in a way that England isn't wild."
Lonely Planet on NZ: "few countries on this lonely planet as diverse, unspoiled and utterly, utterly photogenic" ; "the sun kicks like a mule".
New Zealand is the land of glaciers, rainforests, fjords, tussock plains, highlands, tablelands, mangroves, palms, golden sand beaches, snow capped mountains, volcanoes, earthquakes, wind, merino sheep, wine, olives, scorching sun, incessant rain, endless drought, flightless birds, dramatic coastlines, and the population of Scotland in a country the size of the UK. You need to visit. :)
#6
Posted 22 February 2011 - 06:51
Shocking pictures coming out on the TV here.....Hopefully my friends In Christchurch are OK ...Some working out at the University others in town.
#8
Posted 22 February 2011 - 06:59
Kiwi, on 22 February 2011 - 06:56 , said:
Shallower and centered nearer the city. And at a worse time (1PM on a weekday instead of 4AM on a weekend!)
Max: 36C
Min: -12C
Max Wind Gust: 134 mph (!)
Ian McKellen on NZ: "Everything here is more magnificent. The landscape is familiar...but the vegetation is unusual and the mountains seem so much sharper. If you're looking for what the poets used to call 'the awful' - a sense of awe - that is what you find in New Zealand. And it's wild in a way that England isn't wild."
Lonely Planet on NZ: "few countries on this lonely planet as diverse, unspoiled and utterly, utterly photogenic" ; "the sun kicks like a mule".
New Zealand is the land of glaciers, rainforests, fjords, tussock plains, highlands, tablelands, mangroves, palms, golden sand beaches, snow capped mountains, volcanoes, earthquakes, wind, merino sheep, wine, olives, scorching sun, incessant rain, endless drought, flightless birds, dramatic coastlines, and the population of Scotland in a country the size of the UK. You need to visit. :)
#9
Posted 22 February 2011 - 07:35
coming in. Awful. 6.3 magnitude they are saying.
B.
#10
Posted 22 February 2011 - 08:10
Good to hear you are okay SC, a graphic account by you of your experiences, you must have been so relieved when you reached the school.
here is my weather station, for local written forecasts or simply browsing further afield.
http://www.johnholmes-weather.co.uk/
see my blog for weather updates as I get time and also my plea for preventing getting skin cancer.
#11
Posted 22 February 2011 - 08:27
Website at http://www.sheffieldweather.co.uk
Mobile link at http://http://www.sh...uk/iphone/#home
Mobile phone Lightning detection http://www.sheffield...her.co.uk/spark
#12
Posted 22 February 2011 - 08:43
Kiwi, on 22 February 2011 - 06:56 , said:
Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see.
#13
Posted 22 February 2011 - 08:58
johnholmes, on 22 February 2011 - 08:10 , said:
Good to hear you are okay SC, a graphic account by you of your experiences, you must have been so relieved when you reached the school.
I was happier when I filled up with fuel and had enough to get home! Jake was taking it in his stride; all part of the NZ adventure :0)
Kirsty, my 10 year old daughter is away on school camp some 100Km away. However, the school has taken the sensible view that the kids are safe, so why bring them back into Christchurch? We will collect her tomorrow.
Kiwi, on 22 February 2011 - 06:51 , said:
Shocking pictures coming out on the TV here.....Hopefully my friends In Christchurch are OK ...Some working out at the University others in town.
Lyttelton & New Brighton are being described as un-inhabitable although the areas closer to the university should be better placed. Sumner and Red Cliffs have been cut off due to bridges being taken out. The Lyttelton tunnel is closed.
#14
Posted 22 February 2011 - 08:53
The PIT, on 22 February 2011 - 08:27 , said:
Yes, Wellington is always considered to be the most worrisome. So important buildings here are built on base isolators, and the supports for motorways are encased in steel. The city is on the continental divide, and has about five faults running through it (one is a 10min walk from my house). But we've barely had a jolt here for ages.
Max: 36C
Min: -12C
Max Wind Gust: 134 mph (!)
Ian McKellen on NZ: "Everything here is more magnificent. The landscape is familiar...but the vegetation is unusual and the mountains seem so much sharper. If you're looking for what the poets used to call 'the awful' - a sense of awe - that is what you find in New Zealand. And it's wild in a way that England isn't wild."
Lonely Planet on NZ: "few countries on this lonely planet as diverse, unspoiled and utterly, utterly photogenic" ; "the sun kicks like a mule".
New Zealand is the land of glaciers, rainforests, fjords, tussock plains, highlands, tablelands, mangroves, palms, golden sand beaches, snow capped mountains, volcanoes, earthquakes, wind, merino sheep, wine, olives, scorching sun, incessant rain, endless drought, flightless birds, dramatic coastlines, and the population of Scotland in a country the size of the UK. You need to visit. :)
#15
Posted 22 February 2011 - 09:00

Quote
And Tuesday's damaging tremor in Christchurch is almost certainly related to the much more energetic event that hit the region last September. But whereas last year's quake caused relatively little damage and no deaths, the natural disaster that struck the city on 22 February looks set to go down in the record books as one of the most catastrophic in New Zealand's history.
The critical difference on this occasion is that the ground broke almost directly under the country's second city, and at shallow depth. Christchurch would have been subjected to intense shaking. Masonry collapse was widespread, even in a city where earthquake building regulations are among the strictest in the world. Seismologists began to record the biggest tremor, a magnitude 6.3, on their equipment at 12:51 and 43 seconds local time (23:51:43 GMT) - right in the middle of Christchurch's day. The focus, the point in the Earth where the rocks first rupture, was a mere 5km (3 miles) below the surface.
Contrast this with September's magnitude 7.0 event; its epicentre occurred some 40km west of the city and at a depth of 10km, and it continued to rupture mainly away from the major built-up areas. Seismologists on Tuesday were in agreement though that these events are linked. There have been a series of aftershocks following on from September's quake - approximately six that have been greater than or equal to magnitude 5. But the 22 February earthquake represents the largest aftershock to date.
The grander geological setting for both events is certainly the same. New Zealand lies on the notorious Ring of Fire, the line of frequent quakes and volcanic eruptions that circles virtually the entire Pacific rim. More specifically New Zealand straddles the boundary between two tectonic plates - the Pacific and Australia-India plates. In the north of New Zealand, to the east of North Island, the more dense Pacific Ocean plate is pulled down beneath the lighter Australia-India plate in a process known as subduction.
To the south of South Island something similar is happening but the other way - the Australia-India plate is being forced below the Pacific plate. On South Island itself, the location of the latest quake, a third scenario plays out. Here the plates rub past each other horizontally. This is most evident to geologists as the Alpine Fault that runs down the spine of the land mass. Dr Gary Gibson, a principal research fellow from the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Melbourne, commented: "On average, large earthquakes will occur less frequently in Christchurch than along the plate boundary, as has been the case for the last 200 years. "However all earthquakes in the Christchurch region will be shallow, so the effect of a given earthquake will be worse than from a deeper plate boundary earthquake of the same magnitude."
http://www.bbc.co.uk...acific-12534181
Reference Number: 3468797
Universal Time: February 22 2011 at 8:21
NZ Daylight Time: Tuesday, February 22 2011 at 9:21 pm
Latitude, Longitude: 43.60°S, 172.56°E
Focal Depth: 7 km
Richter magnitude: 4.8
Region: Canterbury
Location:10 km south-west of Christchurch

http://www.geonet.or...ent_quakes.html


Now, you listen here:'e's not the Messiah,'e's a very naughty boy!
Views & opinions expressed in any of my posts are my own - but the voices made me do it
#16
Posted 22 February 2011 - 10:25


Now, you listen here:'e's not the Messiah,'e's a very naughty boy!
Views & opinions expressed in any of my posts are my own - but the voices made me do it
#17
Posted 22 February 2011 - 10:55
horific
#18
Posted 22 February 2011 - 11:50
here is my weather station, for local written forecasts or simply browsing further afield.
http://www.johnholmes-weather.co.uk/
see my blog for weather updates as I get time and also my plea for preventing getting skin cancer.
#19
Posted 22 February 2011 - 12:25
http://christchurch-...er.appspot.com/
Also updated advice via the media:
Quote
There will be a water plan put in place to get water to the community, Civil Defence says. Portaloos will be deployed, however this may take some time. Civil Defence says people should look after neighbours, friends and family.
Power will remain off in the CBD and eastern suburbs overnight. Tomorrow's kerbside collection is cancelled to the Brighton and coastal areas.
The central city of Christchurch remains closed to traffic. The central city business district has been cordoned off and police are warning people to stay away from the areas within Madras, St Asaph, Montreal and Kilmore Streets for their own safety and to let emergency services do their job. People who try to get into the cordoned off areas will be turned away.
Cordons will be pushed out to the Four Avenues overnight. There is reported damage in other parts of the city including Lyttelton.
POLICE ADVICE
- Stay out of the central city
- Stay at home unless it is absolutely necessary to travel
-Check the welfare of your neighbours - especially the elderly
-Conserve water
The Lyttleton road tunnel is closed and there are rockfalls on the Summit Road so please avoid these areas. Ferrymead Bridge is closed.
For roads information go to the New Zealand Transport Agency .
Emergency triage centres for the injured are operating at Latimer Square, Canterbury University and the Sanitarium Building in Papanui - not South City or the Spotlight Mall, Sydenham.
CIVIL DEFENCE ADVICE
- Expect aftershocks.
- Each time you feel one, drop, cover, and hold on.
- Help those around you if you can.
Only attend A and E at the hospital if absolutely essential. For other injuries, contact your nearest after hours medical centre.







Now, you listen here:'e's not the Messiah,'e's a very naughty boy!
Views & opinions expressed in any of my posts are my own - but the voices made me do it
#20
Posted 22 February 2011 - 12:50
Edited by The PIT, 22 February 2011 - 12:51 .
Website at http://www.sheffieldweather.co.uk
Mobile link at http://http://www.sh...uk/iphone/#home
Mobile phone Lightning detection http://www.sheffield...her.co.uk/spark
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