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Like a lot of strange happenings, it was first noticed in the 1960s: a small seismic pulse, large enough to register on seismological instruments but small enough to go otherwise unnoticed, occurring every 26 seconds. Jack Oliver, a researcher at the Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory, documented the “microseism” and sussed out that it was emanating from somewhere “in the southern or equatorial Atlantic Ocean.” Not until 2005 was it determined that the pulse’s true origin was in the Gulf of Guinea, just off Africa’s western coast, but to this day, scientists still don’t know something just as important — why it’s happening in the first place.

The Richter scale has no upper limit.

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It's a fact

Not that anyone is in a rush to confirm this theory, but the Richter scale — which measures the size of earthquakes — doesn’t max out at 10, 20, or any other number. Thankfully, most earthquakes are so small as to not even register.

There are theories, of course, ranging from volcanic activity to waves, but still no consensus. There does happen to be a volcano on the island of São Tomé in the Gulf of Guinea near the pulse’s origin point, not to mention another microseism linked to the volcano Mount Aso in Japan, which has made that particular explanation more popular in recent years. Though there’s no way of knowing when (or even if) we’ll learn the why of this phenomenon, one thing’s for sure: better a microseism than a macroseism.

Numbers Don't Lie

Numbers Don't Lie

Detectable earthquakes every year
500,000
Highest magnitude ever recorded on the Richter scale
9.5
Tectonic plates (seven major, eight minor)
15
Year pro wrestler Earthquake made his WWF debut
1989

Tori Amos’ 1992 debut solo album was titled “______.”

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Tori Amos’ 1992 debut solo album was titled “Little Earthquakes.”

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California isn’t the most earthquake-prone state.

That would be Alaska, which isn’t just the most earthquake-prone state in the country — it’s one of the most seismically active areas in the world, with 11% of all earthquakes occurring there. That’s because Alaska is part of the Ring of Fire, a nearly 25,000-mile-long area along the Pacific Ocean, characterized by volcanic and seismic activity. The second-largest earthquake ever recorded (a staggering 9.2 on the Richter scale) took place in the Prince William Sound region there on March 27, 1964, lasting about 4.5 minutes and causing a tsunami that was felt as far away as California. Beyond that, three of the eight largest recorded earthquakes in the world have also been in Alaska, as were seven of the 10 largest in America. It has experienced an average of one magnitude 7 to 8 earthquake every year since 1900 and one “great” earthquake (magnitude 8 or higher) every 13 years.

Michael Nordine
Staff Writer

Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.