>>8641006 (lb)
>>8641376 (lb)
For sake of discussion, one Anon's notes vs another Anon's.
>re: opening remarks of Task Force Presser 3/31 17:30 ish
Remarkably similar takes
Fault lines are sometimes within the tectonic plates. The fault lines you see on the maps are the plate boundaries (the big ones).
There are small faults in the plates, which move less often, but do move sometimes.
Sometimes it means something else is moving, sometimes it doesn't.
The Idaho quake is a bit odd, but there are little tremors tens of thousands of times WW every day, and some of those aren't directly related to plate movement.
Also, other things cause minor EQs.
There's tons of evidence that fracking causes minor surface quakes, which feel strong
There's also lots of evidence that tunneling machines and related equipment/activities (explosions etc) cause minor tremors on the surface which seem significant if you're near the epicenter.
Also non-geologist, but I've included EQs in my research for years, and you pick up on stuff over time
o7