The earth drops or rolls under your feet. I've been through damn near a dozen 5.5 or larger quakes. Running is not possible, the movies are full of shit
And apparent watching that video I just linked you to Is equally impossible. It also seems impossible for you to consider that all earth quakes are not the same as the one you experienced. Or that the distance to episcenter matters.
Considering your point for a moment, it is worth noting that explosions register on the richter scale, though similarly not all earth quakes exhibit high amounts of horizontal or vertical motion.
The closer to the epicenter, the earth drops. The further away, the more it rolls. 30 miles away from a 6.8 will still drop if it's located near the surface. They're over so quickly your better off just staying put. I watched the Silmar quake in '68 and how the telephone poles swayed. I was within 10 miles of the epicenter. Whittier in early 90's was in the 6s and laughed watching people try to run outside of the building we were constructing. The only one that really got my attention was Northridge in 92? I watched the earth drop over 2'. You could hear what sounded like a giant explosion and the rumble got louder. Took about 1 minute for it to get to me. The Mojave desert is about the most gentle place to experience a sizeable quake because the sand absorbs the shock. I've lived all over California and always seem to move where the next big quake hits. Rosemont quake was fun because nothing is around to bite you after
5.4 or so is enough to keep you from walking
O.K. You better tell the people at the 1:52 mark in this video that they don't have your permission to walk or run.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HpBhgVXXhmg
The earth drops or rolls under your feet. I've been through damn near a dozen 5.5 or larger quakes. Running is not possible, the movies are full of shit
And apparent watching that video I just linked you to Is equally impossible. It also seems impossible for you to consider that all earth quakes are not the same as the one you experienced. Or that the distance to episcenter matters.
Considering your point for a moment, it is worth noting that explosions register on the richter scale, though similarly not all earth quakes exhibit high amounts of horizontal or vertical motion.
The closer to the epicenter, the earth drops. The further away, the more it rolls. 30 miles away from a 6.8 will still drop if it's located near the surface. They're over so quickly your better off just staying put. I watched the Silmar quake in '68 and how the telephone poles swayed. I was within 10 miles of the epicenter. Whittier in early 90's was in the 6s and laughed watching people try to run outside of the building we were constructing. The only one that really got my attention was Northridge in 92? I watched the earth drop over 2'. You could hear what sounded like a giant explosion and the rumble got louder. Took about 1 minute for it to get to me. The Mojave desert is about the most gentle place to experience a sizeable quake because the sand absorbs the shock. I've lived all over California and always seem to move where the next big quake hits. Rosemont quake was fun because nothing is around to bite you after