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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: elmatador who wrote (58166)1/3/2005 3:22:12 PM
From: lindalib  Respond to of 74559
 
This is eerie since this 'quake had a 40 ft. tsunami..note the date
WORST EUROPEAN EARTHQUAKE:
December 28, 1908

At dawn, the most destructive earthquake in recorded European history
strikes the Straits of Messina in southern Italy, leveling the cities
of Messina in Sicily and Reggio di Calabria on the Italian mainland.
The earthquake and tsunami it caused killed an estimated 100,000
people.

Sicily and Calabria are known as la terra ballerina--"the dancing
land"--for the periodic seismic activity that strikes the region. In
1693, 60,000 people were killed in southern Sicily by an earthquake,
and in 1783 most of the Tyrrenian coast of Calabria was razed by a
massive earthquake that killed 50,000. The quake of 1908 was
particularly costly in terms of human life because it struck at 5:20
a.m. without warning, catching most people at home in bed rather than
in the relative safety of the streets or fields.

The main shock, registering an estimated 7.5 magnitude on the Richter
scale, caused a devastating tsunami with 40-foot waves that washed
over coastal towns and cities. The two major cities on either side of
the Messina Straits--Messina and Reggio di Calabria--had some 90
percent of their buildings destroyed. Telegraph lines were cut and
railway lines were damaged, hampering relief efforts. To make matters
worse, the major quake on the 28th was followed by hundreds of smaller
tremors over subsequent days, bringing down many of the remaining
buildings and injuring or killing rescuers. On December 30, King
Victor Emmanuel III arrived aboard the battleship Napoli to inspect
the devastation.

Meanwhile, a steady rain fell on the ruined cities, forcing the dazed
and injured survivors, clad only in their nightclothes, to take
shelter in caves, grottoes, and impromptu shacks built out of
materials salvaged from the collapsed buildings. Veteran sailors could
barely recognize the shoreline because long stretches of the coast had
sunk several feet into the Messina Strait.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What else happened today?
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=general&month=10272964&day=10272993