6.0 quake 200 miles from home.

You wouldn't know it where we are, but a 6.0 quake shook Wells in Nevada this morning, 200 miles to the west of us. Makes me wonder whether we should invest in earthquake insurance. The problem is that they keep going on about "the big one" here, telling us we're well overdue. The USGS doesn't agree, instead reckoning the Utah earthquake clock has over a 100 years to go. Everyone is afraid of the Wasatch Fault, but that's not the problem here; it's the blind faults that cause most shakers in Utah.
What to do? On the one hand, hundreds of little quakes each year mean the faults are letting off steam so a large one is unlikely. On the other hand, todays event destroyed buildings very close to home. I wonder what the chances are that an insurance company would actually pay out on quake insurance? After all, insurance companies don't make money by paying out.

Comments

Anonymous said…
5.2 quake in Linconshire yesterday morning. :-)

Popular posts from this blog

The non-separation of the LDS church and Utah state.

Employees don't want much