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Cascadia Historic Earthquake Catalog, 1793-1929
Covering Washington, Oregon and Southern British Columbia

Provided by: The Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
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Individual Event Report
Event #560 - Summary, and parameter estimates with source IDs                                           
This earthquake, and sequence of earthquakes that followed a few hours later, were reported by George Eby in the BSSA (V.11, pp. 195-196):"Earth Disturbances at Dixie, Washington, September 14, 1921 ... The first disturbance came at approximately three o'clock in the morning. It was quite severe, but, since it was just a solitary jar, it could not arouse one sufficiently from sleep in time to make careful observations....(At) five o'clock .... there was a very sudden blow, accompanied by a sound like that of a deep blast of dynamite in rock. This sound was instantanous with the jar and of sufficient volume to be heard easily and distinctly....
The shaking of the ground was ... one sudden blow. The action seemed to be vertical rather than horizonal. The bed was shaken quite perceptibly and the building was also visibly shaken and agitated enough to rattle a great deal. An automobile, which was standing within three feet of the bed, was observed to have no horizontal or rocking motion. The movement was comparable to that caused by a car on hitting a sharp bump. About a minute later, there were three tremors following each other in close succession. The sound and motion of each succeeding one was exactly the same as the first, except weaker. Within the next ten minutes there were four other independent shocks, similar, but growing rapidly weaker. Then five minutes later there were several light decreasing remors, each accompanied by a sound correspondingly less audible. These diminished until they could no longer be detected...some people in Waitsburg, ten miles distant, and College Place, fifteen miles, claimed to have felt them slightly...."
TIME LOCATION MAGNITUDE MAX. INTENSITY FELT AREA
YR MO DAY HR MIN AM/PM Time
Type
LAT(N) LON(W) DEP
(km)
MAG Mag
Type
Felt
Plc.
Felt
St.
Inten-
sity
Int.
Type
Felt
Area
Felt
Area
Int.
Felt
Area
Units
1921  14      46.33  118.16        Dixie  WA  VI  RF       
BSSA - 2183 REID1 - 788 - - TAWA - 1167 -

Underlying Source Material
Source ID Publication Pub Date Pub Details
1850  Woodward Clyde Consultants, unpublished  1981  Woodward-Clyde Consultants (1981), Historical Catalog (1841-1980) for the Pacific Northwest Region, unpublished catalog prepared for the Washington Public Power Supply System. Copy provided to UW in 1993. 
Transcription: 192109141100000 46100-118250W VI R 6 01
 
Source ID Publication Pub Date Pub Details
159  Rasmussen, Norman, 1967, Washington state earthquakes 1840 through 1965, BSSA V. 57, No. 3, pp. 463-476  1967   
Transcription: 159 1921 Sept. 14 See Remarks Dixie-Walla Walla V-VI 4 four shocks felt; 11: , 13:, 13:05, 13:20
 
Source ID Publication Pub Date Pub Details
2183  Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America  1921  V. 11, pp. 195-196 
Transcription: Earth Disturbances at Dixie, Washington, September 14, 1921

by George Eby

Dixie, a little village of perhaps one hundred and fifty people, is situated at the forks of a "U"-shaped valley about one-half mile wide, through which a small stream runs. The elevation of the place is approximately 1,500 feet. The village is five miles from the foot of the Blue Mountains.

At the mouth of one of the forks is a large rock quarry which has been operated for about eight years, and, as a result, one quite large cliff has been practically removed. The quarry is composed of basaltic rock with considerable sedimentary calcium-carbonate in the crevices.

No earth disturbances previous to September 14, 1921, had ever been recorded. On the night of the 14th I was sleeping in an open building, with the bed placed directly on the ground. The first disturbance came at approximately three o'clock in the morning. It was quite severe, but, since it was just a solitary jar, it could not arouse one sufficiently from sleep in time to make careful observations.

Everything was the quiet until five o'clock, when there was a very sudden blow, accompanied by a sound like that of a deep blast of dynamite in rock. This sound was instantanous with the jar and of sufficient volume to be heard easily and distinctly, but not great enough to justify the severity of the shock. That is, I have observed that a blast at the quarry with perhaps one-fourth the disturbing force would have a report with about ten times the intensity, and coming considerably after the jar.

The shaking of the ground was not a continued vibrating or rocking motion, but was just one sudden blow. The action seemed to be vertical rather than horizonal. The bed was shaken quite perceptibly and the building was also visibly shaken and agitated enough to rattle a great deal. An automobile, which was standing within three feet of the bed, was observed to have no horizontal or rocking motion. The movement was comparable to that caused by a car on hitting a sharp bump.

About a minute later, there were three tremors following each other in close succession. The sound and motion of each succeeding one was exactly the same as the first, except weaker. Within the next ten minutes there were four other independent shocks, similar, but growing rapidly weaker. Then five minutes later there were several light decreasing remors, each accompanied by a sound correspondingly less audible. These diminished until they could no longer be detected.

But the surprising thing to me about all the jars was that I could distinguish no difference in time between the shock and its sound. This even held true with the minor trembling. These last reprots resembled in tone and volume a blast at great distance.

No damage in the nature of broken chimneys was observed, although some smaller articles were disturbed.

These shocks were not noticed by the farmers who lived more than a mile away from town, although some people in Waitsburg, ten miles distant, and College Place, fifteen miles, claimed to have felt them slightly.

Careful inquiry brought forth no evidence that any large explosions had been set off in the vicinity, or that any of the dynamite in the quarry had been disturbed.

WHITMAN COLLEGE, WALLA WALLA, WASH.
 
Source ID Publication Pub Date Pub Details
1167  Townley, S. D. and M. W. Allen, 1939, Descriptive Catalog of Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast of the United States 1769-1928, Chap. III Earthquakes in Washington, 1883-1928, BSSA, V. 29, No. 1, pp. 259-268  1939   
Transcription: 1921 September 14. About 3 a.m., 5 a.m., 5:01 a.m., and following fifteen minutes. V or VI. Dixie, Walla Walla Co. Local; felt only feebly ten or fifteen miles away. Sharp jars as of vertical blow from beneath.-BSSA, 11, 195.
 
Source ID Publication Pub Date Pub Details
788  Reid, unpub., Scrapbook and Cardfile, on microfilm at USGS in Menlo Park     
Transcription: Dixie 46 degree 20' N; 118 degrees 10' W PST 3 am, 5 am 14 Sept, 1921 GMT say 13h IV (?) -Bull SSA, XI, 95-96 Series of sharp, verticle shocks with simultaneous sounds (...) not recorded at Spokane College about 120 mi distant said the first shocks ever occurring in this neigh- borhood.
 


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