Not to mention the Ag museum sits at the base of Ahtanum Ridge which is actually the western extension of the same anticline. Then as I've said before my house within sight of the crack. It's all definitely in my ballpark!
________________________________ From: UTS uts-bounces@starmanet.com on behalf of Bruce Jividen kundar@gmail.com Sent: Tuesday, January 9, 2018 12:21 PM To: Under the Stars Subject: Re: [UTS] Geo map
Pacific Northwest Seismic Network article on the landslide, with bonus appearance by trains. (Making an interesting Venn diagram of Effie's interests!)
https://pnsn.org/blog/2017/12/30/seismic-monitoring-of-a-slow-landslide
On Sun, Jan 7, 2018 at 11:32 AM Effie in the desert <wadesert@hotmail.commailto:wadesert@hotmail.com> wrote:
I was looking for a geologic map of Rattlesnake ridge, which I didn't find. I did find this one of a study farther north. In the lower corner is a map that does show faults & folds on Ahtanum and Rattlesnake. I think it's interesting that one of those faults, to this layman's eye, looks to be where it is spreading.
The photo I've attached is likely taken from the Parker post office parking lot. I haven't walked down there to be certain but that ugly tower in the foreground is across the highway from Parker. The top of the ridge was in the fog yesterday and so far still is this morning so I can't actually see anything.
https://pubs.usgs.gov/sim/3212/sim3212_sheet.pdf
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