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In the Bill of Human Rights of Cyrus the Great, we read:Freedom and tolerance of thought, speech, religion; choice of place of residence, coming and going, jobs and professions, will be on equal terms and conditions for everyone.No inquiry, injustice or harassment is allowed to be done to anyone.In this way Cyrus says that I have sown the seed of amity, friendship and affection among nations and have granted the people peace of mind, security, tranquility and comfort. From Cyrus the Great, King of Iran, sixth century B.C. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bGRwzAlQbXE&feature=related toxic skies 10 PARTS EVERY ONE MUST SEE PASS IT ON. http://www.blogtalkradio.com/EAGELS-OF-USA1- The alternative 'Patriot' news world is thoroughly penetrated and controlled by agents and operatives... from talk shows and net sites, to documentary producers and columnists. Beware
Date / Time: 7/11/2009 10:32 PM UTC
Published: 10:17PM BST 10 Jul 2009
Since the 6.5-magnitude San Simeon quake in 2003 and the 6.0-magnitude Parkfield quake in 2004 - both located halfway between San Francisco and Los Angeles - tremors have become more frequent and underground stress has increased at the end of a "locked segment" of the San Andreas fault.
A "locked segment" is as a portion of a fault that has not moved in years and is at high risk of a major earthquake.
The increase in tremors could mean that stress is accumulating faster than in the past along that segment of the fault, which ruptured in the magnitude 7.8 Fort Tejon earthquake of 1857, Robert Nadeau, a seismologist at the University of California at Berkeley, and his colleagues wrote in their report, published in the journal Science.
The region of southern California experiences a quake every 85 to 142 years, they said - making a quake theoretically 10 years overdue.
There have been some quakes nearby in the meantime, but the tremors keep occurring, Mr Nadeau said.
"What's surprising is that the activity has not gone down to its old level," Mr Nadeau said in a statement.
A series of small tremors was seen a few days before the Parkfield quake, so Nadeau hopes there may be a way to interpret them to get some kind of warning of future quakes.
The San Andreas fault runs through much of California, the most populous state in the United States.
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