Birdwatch Note Rating
2024-10-15 03:28:51 UTC - NOT_HELPFUL
Rated by Participant: 56AEEDA17103E510F4DD2582990D290DBC1FBF5CD5A6D45F6E28B68C79F54720
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Original Note:
While less common than in places like California, South Carolina has a well-documented history of earthquakes of this size and even larger, including a M~7 in 1886 in Charleston. The Columbia area has had about 100 in the last three years, consistent with recent activity. https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/?extent=33.08004,-81.98273&extent=34.84086,-79.76074&range=search&baseLayer=terrain&search=%7B%22name%22:%22Search%20Results%22,%22params%22:%7B%22starttime%22:%222021-10-08%2000:00:00%22,%22endtime%22:%222024-10-15%2023:59:59%22,%22maxlatitude%22:34.6,%22minlatitude%22:33.325,%22maxlongitude%22:-79.838,%22minlongitude%22:-81.903,%22minmagnitude%22:1.5,%22orderby%22:%22time%22%7D%7D https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_earthquakes_in_South_Carolina https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1886_Charleston_earthquake
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