| Subject: Re: Remote sensor using a Wild Blue internet interface |
| From: miso@sushi.com |
| Date: 30/06/2007, 16:35 |
| Newsgroups: alt.internet.wireless,alt.conspiracy.area51 |
On Jun 29, 10:36 pm, krackula <krack...@i.am> wrote:
On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 18:29:48 -0700, "Lumpy"
<l...@digitalcartography.com> wrote:
m...@sushi.com wrote:
http://www.lazygranch.com/tikroad.htm
In case you missed the lengthy discussion,
here's the website that displays the
seismic measurements from that station -
http://rev.seis.sc.edu/stations/TA/T11A?station_dbid=1586
hey lump ........
these so called seismic charts for that station you mentioned "
do not compute " . many of the traces show " high freq "
motion detection , like ( say ) a wind storm would produce on a
unfiltered sensor. sensors that detect wind ,
or ANY high frequency motions ( above 10hz , but often above even 4.5
hz ) are of absolutely NO use to monitor seismic earthquake
activities.
for example ...... push the " back " button
to page 2007-06-25 ... 2007-06-26 and look
there is NO such thing as a 24 hour earthquake.
all of these 2 hour traces are showing wind induced
sensor activity. go forward to the next day and it's a quieter day
with what looks like a little local truck / car traffic.
( 22:00 )
the next day shows almost no wind and
a couple of interesting trapezoidal
motion prints ....... VERY interesting . also not a natural
earth wave. there are also a few typical seismic events , but FAR too
few to be a real life earthquake record. a typical day
here has dozens of tiny quake events, never seen a quite day ever !
don't know what kind of info they are gathering at the sites,
but it's definitely not basic quake data....... it's something
totally different seismically speaking ! maybe those charts aren't
really what's happening at all. seems odd that someone would spend
all that money and time to sit and watch the wind blow their sensors
from some remote site !!!
There's another monitoring station SW of there
Code: TA.U11A
Name: Corn Creek, NV, USA
Location: 36.42 N, 115.38 W
And there's another on someone's property in Rach-town.
All curiously set up to monitor earth movement south
and east of a place where there may or may not be
a big boom test, if the politics ever work out.
Lumpy
You were the "OPERATION" game voice?
Yes. Take out wrenched ankle.
www.lumpyvoice.com
The sensors are beneath ground, so I don't think there is a wind issue.