Para información OFICIAL y ACTUALIZADA de temblores y tsunamis en Puerto Rico e Islas Vírgenes, o para reportar un sismo sentido, favor de acceder a http://redsismica.uprm.edu/.

Archivo del Diario Vegabajeño de Puerto Rico Segunda Etapa de Diciembre 2012 a Octubre 2016
www.diariovegabajeno.com | email: diariovegabajeno@yahoo.com
Para información OFICIAL y ACTUALIZADA de temblores y tsunamis en Puerto Rico e Islas Vírgenes, o para reportar un sismo sentido, favor de acceder a http://redsismica.uprm.edu/.

En esta foto tomada por Luigi en la Octava Exaltación del Salón de la Fama del Deporte Melao Melao, la cantante Ambar, siempre acompañada de su tía, se preparaba para interpretar de una manera impecable e inolvidable el Himno de Vega Baja «Mas dulce que la miel», escrito por Adrián Santos Tirado y musicalizado por Roberto Sierra Enríquez.
La jóven demostró una maestría en la melodía y la letra en la difícil pero hermosa pieza musical representativa de nuestra ciudad.
De ahora en adelante, informó el martes, sólo los sacerdotes diocesanos que sean «capellanes del Santo Padre» pueden usar el título honorífico, y solamente después de cumplir 65 años. Los obispos, vicarios y arzobispos seguirán siendo llamados «monseñor» y las autoridades de la Santa Sede podrán usarlo si el puesto que ejercen amerita que lo usen.
El Vaticano hizo énfasis en que el papa Pablo VI redujo el número de títulos honorarios en 1968 y que la decisión de Francisco «debe entenderse en esa lógica, como una mayor simplificación».
47 earthquakes – DownloadUpdated: 2014-01-13 14:54:13 UTC-04:00Showing event times using Local System Time (UTC-04:00)28 earthquakes in map area

Y la Tierra habló
Nos habló de cerca
Nos habló al oído
*
Tiembla Tierra tiembla
Y la Tierra tembló
Y nos desnudó
Nos dejó indefensos
*
Habló claro, sin tapujos
Sin engaño ni reserva
Sin disfrazar la verdad
Abierta, directa, sin dísimulo
*
Sí, esta verdad que vivimos
Y que todos queremos ocultar
La del mogollero y la desunión
La de querer ser, lo que jámas podremos
*
Unamos nuestros corazones
En un mismo sentir
Para cuando vuelva a temblar
Tenga algo nuevo que decir
*
Que somos uno para todos
Y todos para uno
Que Puerto Rico es
Regalo de Dios
Las cosas están así. Oscar de la Hoya muestra interés en hacer las pases con su antiguo promotor Bob Arum para la realización de grandes eventos en el 2014, y quien parece ser una de las piezas claves que ayuda en ésta posible tregua parece ser el excampeón mundial Miguel Cotto.
Cotto declaró hace unos días que la ‘guerra fría’ entre Golden Boy y Top Rank y sus aliadas Showtime y HBO es algo “negativo” para el boxeo.
El peleador boricua que va camino a retar al campeón de las 160 libras del Consejo Mundial de Boxeo (CMB), Sergio ‘La Maravilla’ Martínez, el 7 de junio en Nueva York, dijo también que la rivalidad “solamente ha logrado segregar a la comunidad del boxeo”.
El sábado, sin embargo, Héctor Soto, vicepresidente de la empresa Promociones Miguel Cotto, dijo que para ellos no será una sorpresa el ver a De la Hoya y a Arum juntarse para la realización de algún gran evento.
Incluso mencionó a Cotto como posible mediador entre las partes.
“Que no le sorprenda a nadie que sea Miguel Cotto el que una nuevamente a estas dos grandes empresas”, dijo Soto. “La relación de Miguel y nosotros con la empresa de De la Hoya y con la de Bob Arum es muy buena”, añadió.
Cotto recibió a finales de año una oferta de $10 millones para enfrentar a Saúl ‘Canelo’ Álvarez en el mes de marzo en Las Vegas. Pero Cotto se inclinó por una oportunidad ante Martínez que lo pondría de cara a ir tras un cuarto título mundial en una división diferente.
Actualmente ya se menciona peleas tan grandes como un Manny Pacquiao ante Floyd Mayweather Jr. o ante un Danny García. También la posibilidad de un choque entre Juan Manuel Márquez y Robert ‘The Gost’ Guerrero.
García y Guerrero forman parte de la cuadra de peleadores de Golden Boy. Guerrero anunció en días pasados que está vías de romper su acuerdo con GBP.
La agencia libre de Cotto le permite realizar combates bajo las dos empresas. En diciembre de 2012 enfrentó a Austin Trout en un choque bajo la sombrilla de Golden Boy. En octubre, se midió a Delvin Rodríguez en un cartel copromocionado por Top Rank.
“Si le preguntas a Bob (Arum) o a Richard (Schaefer) ellos van a decir que todo está bien (sobre la rivalidad)”, comentó Cotto recientemente. “Pero lo ideal es que ambas empresas se unieran y limaran asperezas para hacer las peleas que el público quiere ver, las grandes peleas. Yo mientras, simplemente estoy aquí para velar por mi mejor interés y así seguiré”, apuntó.
Se ha advertido anteriormente en el Diario Vegabajeño de Puerto Rico

19 de julio de 2013 por Jaime Rosario Justicia
https://diariovegabajeno.com/2013/07/19/jaime-rosario-justicia-el-mundo-de-jaime-vaticinios/
9 de julio de 2013 por Thomas Jimmy Rosario Martínez
https://diariovegabajeno.com/2013/07/09/plan-de-pueblo-para-el-desastre/

Historia de los terremotos| Carlos Ayes
http://carlosayes.wordpress.com/2013/03/19/danos-a-la-iglesia-catolica-por-terremoto-de-1875/
The January 13, 2014 M 6.4 earthquake north of Puerto Rico occurred as a result of oblique-thrust faulting. Preliminary faulting mechanisms for the event indicate it ruptured either a structure dipping shallowly to the south and striking approximately east-west, or a near-vertical structure striking northwest-southeast. At the location of this earthquake, the North America plate moves west-southwest with respect to the Caribbean plate at a velocity of approximately 20 mm/yr, and subducts beneath the Caribbean plate at the Puerto Rico Trench. The location, depth and mechanism of the earthquake are consistent with the event occurring on this subduction zone interface.
While the Puerto Rico Trench is known to be a significant seismic hazard, and is capable of hosting M8+ earthquakes, moderate-to-large events on the subduction zone are rare. Over the past century, three such events have occurred nearby to the January 13, 2014 earthquake – a M 6.6 event in 1915, just to the east of the 2014 event; a M 7.0 earthquake 70 km to the west in 1917; and a M 7.6 earthquake in 1943 just northwest of the 2014 earthquake. Two earthquakes occurred in the Mona Passage approximately 100 km to the southwest of the 2014 earthquake in 1916 (M 7.0) and 1918 (M 7.3), while the 1946 M 7.9-8.0 Hispaniola earthquake struck 230 km to the west, also on the North America slab interface. The July 1943 North Mona Passage earthquake did not cause significant damage in Puerto Rico, though it did spawn a small tsunami, and was the first in a series of large events in the broader northern Caribbean region between central Hispaniola and Puerto Rico over the following decade, including the larger 1946 earthquake. The 1946 event is known to have caused significant damage in both Hispaniola and Puerto Rico, including destruction from a subsequent tsunami.
Extensive diversity and complexity of tectonic regimes characterizes the perimeter of the Caribbean plate, involving no fewer than four major plates (North America, South America, Nazca, and Cocos). Inclined zones of deep earthquakes (Wadati-Benioff zones), ocean trenches, and arcs of volcanoes clearly indicate subduction of oceanic lithosphere along the Central American and Atlantic Ocean margins of the Caribbean plate, while crustal seismicity in Guatemala, northern Venezuela, and the Cayman Ridge and Cayman Trench indicate transform fault and pull-apart basin tectonics.
Along the northern margin of the Caribbean plate, the North America plate moves westwards with respect to the Caribbean plate at a velocity of approximately 20 mm/yr. Motion is accommodated along several major transform faults that extend eastward from Isla de Roatan to Haiti, including the Swan Island Fault and the Oriente Fault. These faults represent the southern and northern boundaries of the Cayman Trench. Further east, from the Dominican Republic to the Island of Barbuda, relative motion between the North America plate and the Caribbean plate becomes increasingly complex and is partially accommodated by nearly arc-parallel subduction of the North America plate beneath the Caribbean plate. This results in the formation of the deep Puerto Rico Trench and a zone of intermediate focus earthquakes (70-300 km depth) within the subducted slab. Although the Puerto Rico subduction zone is thought to be capable of generating a megathrust earthquake, there have been no such events in the past century. The last probable interplate (thrust fault) event here occurred on May 2, 1787 and was widely felt throughout the island with documented destruction across the entire northern coast, including Arecibo and San Juan. Since 1900, the two largest earthquakes to occur in this region were the August 4, 1946 M8.0 Samana earthquake in northeastern Hispaniola and the July 29, 1943 M7.6 Mona Passage earthquake, both of which were shallow thrust fault earthquakes. A significant portion of the motion between the North America plate and the Caribbean plate in this region is accommodated by a series of left-lateral strike-slip faults that bisect the island of Hispaniola, notably the Septentrional Fault in the north and the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Fault in the south. Activity adjacent to the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Fault system is best documented by the devastating January 12, 2010 M7.0 Haiti strike-slip earthquake, its associated aftershocks and a comparable earthquake in 1770.
Moving east and south, the plate boundary curves around Puerto Rico and the northern Lesser Antilles where the plate motion vector of the Caribbean plate relative to the North and South America plates is less oblique, resulting in active island-arc tectonics. Here, the North and South America plates subduct towards the west beneath the Caribbean plate along the Lesser Antilles Trench at rates of approximately 20 mm/yr. As a result of this subduction, there exists both intermediate focus earthquakes within the subducted plates and a chain of active volcanoes along the island arc. Although the Lesser Antilles is considered one of the most seismically active regions in the Caribbean, few of these events have been greater than M7.0 over the past century. The island of Guadeloupe was the site of one of the largest megathrust earthquakes to occur in this region on February 8, 1843, with a suggested magnitude greater than 8.0. The largest recent intermediate-depth earthquake to occur along the Lesser Antilles arc was the November 29, 2007 M7.4 Martinique earthquake northwest of Fort-De-France.
The southern Caribbean plate boundary with the South America plate strikes east-west across Trinidad and western Venezuela at a relative rate of approximately 20 mm/yr. This boundary is characterized by major transform faults, including the Central Range Fault and the Boconó-San Sebastian-El Pilar Faults, and shallow seismicity. Since 1900, the largest earthquakes to occur in this region were the October 29, 1900 M7.7 Caracas earthquake, and the July 29, 1967 M6.5 earthquake near this same region. Further to the west, a broad zone of compressive deformation trends southwestward across western Venezuela and central Columbia. The plate boundary is not well defined across northwestern South America, but deformation transitions from being dominated by Caribbean/South America convergence in the east to Nazca/South America convergence in the west. The transition zone between subduction on the eastern and western margins of the Caribbean plate is characterized by diffuse seismicity involving low- to intermediate-magnitude (M<6.0) earthquakes of shallow to intermediate depth.
The plate boundary offshore of Colombia is also characterized by convergence, where the Nazca plate subducts beneath South America towards the east at a rate of approximately 65 mm/yr. The January 31, 1906 M8.5 earthquake occurred on the shallowly dipping megathrust interface of this plate boundary segment. Along the western coast of Central America, the Cocos plate subducts towards the east beneath the Caribbean plate at the Middle America Trench. Convergence rates vary between 72-81 mm/yr, decreasing towards the north. This subduction results in relatively high rates of seismicity and a chain of numerous active volcanoes; intermediate-focus earthquakes occur within the subducted Cocos plate to depths of nearly 300 km. Since 1900, there have been many moderately sized intermediate-depth earthquakes in this region, including the September 7, 1915 M7.4 El Salvador and the October 5, 1950 M7.8 Costa Rica events.
The boundary between the Cocos and Nazca plates is characterized by a series of north-south trending transform faults and east-west trending spreading centers. The largest and most seismically active of these transform boundaries is the Panama Fracture Zone. The Panama Fracture Zone terminates in the south at the Galapagos rift zone and in the north at the Middle America trench, where it forms part of the Cocos-Nazca-Caribbean triple junction. Earthquakes along the Panama Fracture Zone are generally shallow, low- to intermediate in magnitude (M<7.2) and are characteristically right-lateral strike-slip faulting earthquakes. Since 1900, the largest earthquake to occur along the Panama Fracture Zone was the July 26, 1962 M7.2 earthquake.
Por Thomas Jimmy Rosario Martínez DVPR
Tan pronto la luz del día ilumine su hogar, revíselo, ya que anteriormente en Vega Baja ha habido grietas y daños estructurales con temblores de menos intensidad.
En otros municipios ya se han registrado daños de cristales rotos y losetas levantadas, según El Vocero.
Tambien debe tener preparada su mochila con objetos esenciales para sobrevivencia, en caso de que un terremoto ocurra. Apréndase la ruta de desalojo en caso de tsunami si vive en áreas inundables o cerca del mar y planifique salir de su hogar en caso de emergencia.
Las comunicaciones, las vías de tránsito y los servicios de energía eléctrica, agua y gas pueden colapsar, de hecho, anoche no se podía entrar a la red sísmica y hubo que depender de otros sistemas de fuera de Puerto Rico.
Lo de anoche fue un aviso. Ojalá que nada vuelva a suceder, pero la tierra sigue temblando. El mañana puede ser hoy.

Earthquakes over 3.0 M within the last 24 hours
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