😈✨🍺MrTenant's Tavern and Dungeon

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Hello
Glad you are ok. Having been through some pretty horrific earthquakes, I know EXACTLY what you're feeling right now...
It was maybe 30 seconds. I was reading that this part of the country is very old geologically. The rock is very hard and faulting is minor. When an earthquake hits it was described as like ringing a bell. You guys are in the Ring of Fire.
 
It was maybe 30 seconds. I was reading that this part of the country is very old geologically. The rock is very hard and faulting is minor. When an earthquake hits it was described as like ringing a bell. You guys are in the Ring of Fire.
Yep
But when you're not used to them... its a scary feeling!
 
It was maybe 30 seconds. I was reading that this part of the country is very old geologically. The rock is very hard and faulting is minor. When an earthquake hits it was described as like ringing a bell. You guys are in the Ring of Fire.
Like in Finland, then.
 
It was maybe 30 seconds. I was reading that this part of the country is very old geologically. The rock is very hard and faulting is minor. When an earthquake hits it was described as like ringing a bell. You guys are in the Ring of Fire.
I spent 2 years in Riverside, California for college education
It was a wild place
Rock and Roll, two or three times a month
 
I'm interested in continental drift via my dinosaur interest. I'll have to take a look at Finland.
The seismic activity here is still due to the last ice age - the ground is still rising up. Kvarken (the narrowest part of the sea between Finland and Sweden) is where it rises fastest. It's indeed significant amounts in a lifetime. They even have a permanent exhibition about it in Vaasa.

Ice age also pretty much wiped out any interesting stuff above hard bedrock. In Estonia they have some soft rock above it, meters of it - here anything soft material has accumulated after the ice age. (I could probably still give you a lecture of the basics of the geology around here, but I doubt the others would appreciate.)
 
I'm interested in continental drift via my dinosaur interest. I'll have to take a look at Finland.
A quick scan shows that the parts you mention are some of the oldest rocks on Earth. Very interesting. The glaciers scraped off 25 meters of material during the last ice age.
 
I'm better thank you! Had a 'wobble' the other day but doing well now
How are you?
🫂🫂🫂

It's the dust season. For the first time ever I was almost too tired and off (without actually being ill) for our weekly session with my Dom. But it's still nice to be with him. Just ❤️
 
The seismic activity here is still due to the last ice age - the ground is still rising up. Kvarken (the narrowest part of the sea between Finland and Sweden) is where it rises fastest. It's indeed significant amounts in a lifetime. They even have a permanent exhibition about it in Vaasa.

Ice age also pretty much wiped out any interesting stuff above hard bedrock. In Estonia they have some soft rock above it, meters of it - here anything soft material has accumulated after the ice age. (I could probably still give you a lecture of the basics of the geology around here, but I doubt the others would appreciate.)
People don't appreciate how the glaciers deformed the earth with their weight. Technically we are still in an interglacial stage. Pretty mind boggling.
 
A quick scan shows that the parts you mention are some of the oldest rocks on Earth. Very interesting.
And we have very little natural drama here in many ways. But I have to correct myself - it's the end of the Gulf of Bothnia that rises fastest - 9mm/year. It's just more noticeable in Kvarken as it's shallow.
 
People don't appreciate how the glaciers deformed the earth with their weight. Technically we are still in an interglacial stage. Pretty mind boggling.
I grew up 5km from the sea in the Kvarken area, so I grew up with that knowledge. You take someone in eastern parts of the country and they might not know, or remember, but the west coast has known for hundreds of years.

The harbour they had in 19th century isn't on the shore anymore. The one you could still sail to Sweden from in the 1950's is now only for small boats. The current harbour won't be usable for that many decades. Now they're already throwing ideas about making a bridge to Sweden within my lifetime.

Edit. And they made a pretty significant bridge to the archipelago partly because they expected to be move the harbour there at some point. The archipelago you can easily find in maps - in the middle of the gulf.
 
This bay had lost some 50% of it's area in 50 years, or so I learned around 1990. Not all due to bedrock rising, though... It's shallow and the tiny river brings ever more clay in there.
 
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