• Rhaedas@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    In areas that are prone to earthquakes, not really. This isn’t one of them, so it’s unusual and worth a report and determination of the source. A 4.0 at the epicenter would feel different farther depending on the material too - most of Florida wouldn’t transmit the energy well and slosh around a bit, unlike some bedrock that can carry the energy much farther. My real question would be if this is a natural cause, can there ever be a potential for seafloor movement that would power a tsunami (I don’t think so)? That would be far worse than the actual ground shaking for Florida coastline residents.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Pretty sure it’s all but impossible for anything to happen in the Gulf to cause a tsunami. It’s freaky flat around here, flattest state in the Union. And the Gulf ain’t much lower, at all. Simply no possibility of a rock slide going downhill. No hills.