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dipsydoodle

(42,239 posts)
3. Similiar incident near where I live measured 2.4 on the Richter scale.
Thu Sep 6, 2012, 04:28 AM
Sep 2012

Buncefield fire.

The first and largest explosion occurred at 06:01 UTC on Sunday, 11 December 2005 near container 912.[6][9] Further explosions followed which eventually overwhelmed 20 large storage tanks.[10] From all accounts, it seems to have been an unconfined vapour cloud explosion of unusually high strength—also known as a fuel-air explosion.[11] Because of an inversion layer, the explosions were heard up to 125 miles (200 km) away; there were reports that they were audible in Belgium, France, and the Netherlands.[2][6][12]

The British Geological Survey monitored the event, which measured 2.4 on the Richter scale.[4][9][12] It was reported that people were woken in south London, and as far west as Wokingham (about 28 miles (45 km)), where in its southern suburb, Finchampstead, numerous people felt the shockwave after the initial explosion. Subsequent explosions occurred at 06:27 and 06:28.[5][6]

Witnesses many miles from the terminal observed flames hundreds of feet high; the smoke cloud was visible from space, and from as far north as Lincolnshire (about 70 miles (110 km)) away.[5] Damage from the blasts included broken windows at various buildings including the Holy Trinity church and Leverstock Green School, blown-in or warped front doors, and an entire wall being removed from a warehouse more than half a mile (800 m) from the site.[16] Buildings in neighbouring St Albans also suffered; Townsend School had serious blast damage, and a window was blown out of St Albans Abbey (about 5 miles (8 km)).[9]

Several nearby office blocks were hit so badly that almost every window, front and back, was blown in as the explosion ripped through them.[17] During the working day, these offices would have been full of people, and many deaths may have resulted. Reports also indicated that cars in nearby streets caught fire. The roof of at least one house was blown off.[16] Buildings in the vicinity were evacuated by police, not only because of the smoke and possibility of more explosions, but because of the danger of structural damage making the buildings unstable.[9]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buncefield_fire

When the fuel air explosion occurred it created a vacuum for miles around maybe only for seconds. The bang woke me when the main first explosion occurred. I thought at first the that 40 or so banjo and guitars which litter my walls hung from picture rails had all hit the deck at the same time. I could see my four cats were freaked, saw no damage, couldn't figure what had caused the sound and went back to sleep. I later figured that what woke me was the trapdoor to the roof levitating and slamming shut loudly.There was freezing fog that morning and the smoke cloud which I saw soon as I left my house a few hours later soon with that. The huge cloud , miles wide, drifted across southern England for about a week before it dissipated completely.

50 year old geezer refinery CountAllVotes Sep 2012 #1
Bullshit. canuckledragger Sep 2012 #2
Similiar incident near where I live measured 2.4 on the Richter scale. dipsydoodle Sep 2012 #3
Latest Discussions»Latest Breaking News»Pre-fire cloud mostly ste...»Reply #3