GPS stations along the coast are moving an average of 13mm each year, whereas stations a few miles inland are moving only 6mm each year, and stations significantly away from the coast are not moving at all.
I found some educational lessons that have some historical data, I’m having difficulty finding any from the Cascadia fault line. What is noticeable is the continual increase on all these faults, if one is moving 13mm and another is only moving 6mm, they match in percentage increased, if one increases 2% then the other matches. There is a jump in one of the attached and I am trying to localize to some earthquake event, not finding anything … yet. This compression is raising land in the lesser movement areas, not much, but by more mm’s. GPS stations are now part of the ShakeAlert® Earthquake Early Warning System network | EarthScope Consortium another site with information. You can't just keep increasing the friction without an effect. Haiku …
‘This life is but a shadow of a complete life, and there are many shadows. It’s where you came from before this life, it’s where you will go after this life, it all about the lessons you learn on the way’ ...
Haiku's middle attachment (15-cascadia...) says in item 2: "GPS stations on the Pacific Coast are moving
toward the northeast at about 15 mm/year". Wouldn't less motion now (i.e. 13 mm in recent video) mean more pressure is building up, setting the stage for a large motion from accumulated pressure (i.e. earthquake)?
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