More aftershocks
Trip Start
Jan 30, 2007
1
90
814
Trip End
Dec 31, 2011

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Last night I got a phone text message.
Did you feel yesterday's earthquake?
There will be an earthquake around 12.30am tonight, 3.2. Be careful.
Well, I didn't feel the previous quake, and last night we waited for the quake, but none was felt here.
When choosing where to dine, we were careful to select an outside location, though it was under some roof tiles which would do some serious head damage.
But around midnight, on a balmy summer evening. Nothing was stirring.
Which could be a bad sign, as sometimes in earthquake weather, all the animals go quiet, sensing something about to happen.
But 12.30am came and went. Nothing.
After 1am I went to bed.
Then today I woke up to find there had been another quake in Sichuan. In the same area as the big one.
This from Reuters:
Aftershock causes more misery in China
A strong aftershock jolted southwest China killing at least one person and injuring 400 others, state media said, nearly a fortnight after an earthquake killed tens of thousands in the same area.
More than 70,000 houses toppled during Sunday's tremor in Sichuan province, state television reported. The 5.8 magnitude aftershock was epicentred 40km west-northwest of Guangyuan, the US Geological Survey said.
A local official in Guangyuan county said one person was killed and 24 hurt in collapsed houses or landslides, Xinhua state news agency reported.
As the aftershock occurred, hundreds of troops carrying explosives were trekking through the area, attempting to reach a "quake lake" that threatened a secondary disaster.
Concerned by a steep rise in the water level of a giant lake at Tangjiashan, authorities want to blast a hole in the barrier before it bursts and causes a flash flood. Thousands have been evacuated from below the lake as a precaution.
"I can assure (that) the people who need to be moved have already been safely relocated," said a general, who gave his name only as Zhou, watching over hundreds of troops outside the wrecked town of Beichuan as they readied to march to the lake.
Premier Wen Jiabao, who believes the overall death toll from quake earlier this month could exceed 80,000, has said the main concerns are secondary disasters like flooding and landslides, epidemics, and providing shelter for the 5 million displaced.
Hundreds of aftershocks have rattled the area since the 7.9 magnitude quake on May 12.
State television earlier reported that an 80-year-old partially paralysed man was pulled alive from the rubble on Friday, 266 hours after the main quake hit.
The man was rescued in Mianzhu city, where he had been trapped under a collapsed pillar of his house. He had survived after being fed by his wife, the television report said.
The Tangjiashan quake lake, one of dozens, rose 1.93 metres on Saturday to 723 metres, Xinhua said.
"The relief work for Tangjiashan quake lake is now at critical stage," Vice Minister of Water Resource E Jingpin told a news conference in Beijing. "The daunting difficulty in treating a quake lake is its unpredictability - its formation and when it could burst."
General Zhou said the Tangjiashan lake was formed by a mudslide.
Heavy rain and high winds were forecast for the area on Sunday and Monday.
State media reported that fog had prevented the airlift of personnel and equipment to the lake, and that more than 1500 soldiers were now going by foot. Each soldier was carrying 10 kg of explosives, Xinhua said.
The lake is just 3.2km upstream from Beichuan, a town so badly hit that it will be rebuilt in a new location and the ruins of collapsed buildings left as a quake memorial.
Jingping said China had a window of about one month before the rainy season begins in Sichuan and must use the "precious time" to shore up as many dams as possible.
The mountainous region along the fault line is also densely packed with dams, raising concerns that if either the quake lakes or the weakened dams burst, water could cascade down the river and cause other dams to fail.
Jingpin said 20,000 people had been evacuated from areas threatened by 19 quake lakes.
Despite assurances from authorities that any controlled water release would be safe, farmers said they were worried.
"At night-time you can hear the rumbling from the landslides around here and sometimes the earth shakes," said Yang Daifu, 70, a farmer from Nongwan village, which was nearly completely wiped out in the earthquake.
"We see the water is rising as well, so we still feel threatened here," said Yang, who lives in one of tens of thousands of state-issued blue tents a few kilometres from his old home.
More quakes are predicted too.
Did you feel yesterday's earthquake?
There will be an earthquake around 12.30am tonight, 3.2. Be careful.
Well, I didn't feel the previous quake, and last night we waited for the quake, but none was felt here.
When choosing where to dine, we were careful to select an outside location, though it was under some roof tiles which would do some serious head damage.
But around midnight, on a balmy summer evening. Nothing was stirring.
Which could be a bad sign, as sometimes in earthquake weather, all the animals go quiet, sensing something about to happen.
But 12.30am came and went. Nothing.
After 1am I went to bed.
Then today I woke up to find there had been another quake in Sichuan. In the same area as the big one.
This from Reuters:
Aftershock causes more misery in China
A strong aftershock jolted southwest China killing at least one person and injuring 400 others, state media said, nearly a fortnight after an earthquake killed tens of thousands in the same area.
More than 70,000 houses toppled during Sunday's tremor in Sichuan province, state television reported. The 5.8 magnitude aftershock was epicentred 40km west-northwest of Guangyuan, the US Geological Survey said.
A local official in Guangyuan county said one person was killed and 24 hurt in collapsed houses or landslides, Xinhua state news agency reported.
As the aftershock occurred, hundreds of troops carrying explosives were trekking through the area, attempting to reach a "quake lake" that threatened a secondary disaster.
Concerned by a steep rise in the water level of a giant lake at Tangjiashan, authorities want to blast a hole in the barrier before it bursts and causes a flash flood. Thousands have been evacuated from below the lake as a precaution.
"I can assure (that) the people who need to be moved have already been safely relocated," said a general, who gave his name only as Zhou, watching over hundreds of troops outside the wrecked town of Beichuan as they readied to march to the lake.
Premier Wen Jiabao, who believes the overall death toll from quake earlier this month could exceed 80,000, has said the main concerns are secondary disasters like flooding and landslides, epidemics, and providing shelter for the 5 million displaced.
Hundreds of aftershocks have rattled the area since the 7.9 magnitude quake on May 12.
State television earlier reported that an 80-year-old partially paralysed man was pulled alive from the rubble on Friday, 266 hours after the main quake hit.
The man was rescued in Mianzhu city, where he had been trapped under a collapsed pillar of his house. He had survived after being fed by his wife, the television report said.
The Tangjiashan quake lake, one of dozens, rose 1.93 metres on Saturday to 723 metres, Xinhua said.
"The relief work for Tangjiashan quake lake is now at critical stage," Vice Minister of Water Resource E Jingpin told a news conference in Beijing. "The daunting difficulty in treating a quake lake is its unpredictability - its formation and when it could burst."
General Zhou said the Tangjiashan lake was formed by a mudslide.
Heavy rain and high winds were forecast for the area on Sunday and Monday.
State media reported that fog had prevented the airlift of personnel and equipment to the lake, and that more than 1500 soldiers were now going by foot. Each soldier was carrying 10 kg of explosives, Xinhua said.
The lake is just 3.2km upstream from Beichuan, a town so badly hit that it will be rebuilt in a new location and the ruins of collapsed buildings left as a quake memorial.
Jingping said China had a window of about one month before the rainy season begins in Sichuan and must use the "precious time" to shore up as many dams as possible.
The mountainous region along the fault line is also densely packed with dams, raising concerns that if either the quake lakes or the weakened dams burst, water could cascade down the river and cause other dams to fail.
Jingpin said 20,000 people had been evacuated from areas threatened by 19 quake lakes.
Despite assurances from authorities that any controlled water release would be safe, farmers said they were worried.
"At night-time you can hear the rumbling from the landslides around here and sometimes the earth shakes," said Yang Daifu, 70, a farmer from Nongwan village, which was nearly completely wiped out in the earthquake.
"We see the water is rising as well, so we still feel threatened here," said Yang, who lives in one of tens of thousands of state-issued blue tents a few kilometres from his old home.
More quakes are predicted too.

