Selected Earthquake Resources on the Web:

I keep these here to I don't have to look all over the place when I need information.

OhioSeis stations!  We hope to joint this club in the near future.

Excel spreadsheet (Windows) for viewing OhioSeis data.   Save the 1 hour of data as a .txt file, open that file in Excel (delimited by both tabs and spaces), copy it and past over file saved on the Data worksheet.  Seismograms should pop up on the worksheet so labeled.  Save the spreadsheet as is for later use at this point.  Then change limits on the time axis to expand the horizontal scale.  Select the data line, point at the first arrival and the (t,amplitude) values are displayed.

Where and how big are recent earthquakes? National Earthquake Information Center: http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/current_seismicity.shtml

Earthquake Resources for teachers: Purdue University http://geoweb.eas.purdue.edu/seismology_resources.html#slideinfo

Live seismograms! Global coverage!! http://aslwww.cr.usgs.gov/Seismic_Data/liss.htm

Our friends in Ann Arbor: http://www.geo.lsa.umich.edu/MichSeis/

PEPP - high schools participate in seismograph station networks

Our friends at The College of Wooster seismic station

University of Chile (in Spanish): http://www.dgf.uchile.cl/cgi-bin/informes

The best and up-to-date list of WWW earthquake resources I have seen: http://www.geophys.washington.edu/seismosurfing.html

Keep your ear to the ground!

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