You'd think we would notice a magnitude 5.2 earthquake with an epicenter only 150 miles to our northeast.
But nope, we slept right through it.
I think most people who were awake around here at 4:36:59 a.m. CDT felt it, put it passed unnoticed at our house.
No cracks in tile or pavement, nothing falling off of shelves, nothing noticeable at all.
6 comments:
It woke Mark, but I slept through most of it. Bobby was sitting in the hall watching the bathroom mirror rattle. It was disorienting, but no local damage was reported.
Second quake at virtually the same epicenter initially measured 4.5 at 11:14 am. Didn't feel this one either. WTF? ;-)
Yes, I think I felt it, but I just thought it was my imagination. Obviously, it wasn't very strong.
Maybe being up on Crowley's Ridge is a good thing when faults start slipping.
I've been giving lessons on the pronunciation of the New MAD-rid fault. It's being pronounced around here like Madrid, Spain. Damn southerners. I'm also using El Do-RAY-do (instead of El Do-RAH-do) as another example of the lazy southern tongue.
Well, Hoosiers have a flair for butchering foreign place names too. Like Versailles (Ver-SAYles), and Chili (CHEYE-lie) and Peru (PEE-roo) and Monticello (Monty-SELL-oh).
Touche. How often would you get your ass kicked walking around Indiana saying Versigh and Montichello, though. :-P
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