Red Ash by Roy Smith

This is about a landslide in North West USA that just happened. I know nothing about it not considering it of the same nature aas the things I generally study. But who can say?

I wrote the following in reply to a post on Sci.geo.earthquakes a Usent group dedicated to discussions of earthquakes world wide:

On Thursday, 27 March 2014 18:32:57 UTC, avag…@gmail.com  wrote:
> read that article and the side bar pops out….most comprehensive so far …..on par with England’s cost saving NO DREDGE plan.
>
> I had not seen an aerial photo showing previous slide and settle activity nor descriptions of this as inside the print. I assume reporting is somewhat tongue in check but safer from the east coast.
>
> Nor do I know who bought what land when and for ? $$$.
>
> Reporting on geology analysis….off course you have a geo analysis for your backyard…has not, again casually looking thru this, shown a after slide field analysis nor following that, communications to the people involved on how far the mtn could travel.
>
> With apologies to our friend in NZ for pursuing crit on steel reinforcing rod costs …. 
>
> I am familiar with the hills north sides and a short section of highway up the NE side. Hiking along creek bottoms n into secluded terrain, and up very conical hills either great deposits or fumaroles always walks you past unusual dirt/clay/pebble mixes not soil not stone: hard when dry, soft when damp, soluble if saturated over long time spans.
>
> One may climb straight up on a near vertical meadow….keeping in mind your patch may come lose heading down hill with you on it…..
>  Not Wales !

****

Following one of the longest winters I have ever heard of in Britain We had snow through till march in 1962/63 there was a coal tip slide that killed about hundred and twenty children in a South Wales village called Aberfan.

That was in 1964 I think.
Where I live now (Stoke on Trent) we had spoil tips just like it, removed in the late 70’s I believe, the spoil used as building infill called hard-core (levelling substrate on which the concrete raft is poured. A method used as foundations for houses in western Europe.)

A friend had written a book about his experience with it and asked me to help him work on the foreword. He wanted it cut to fit one page from the three or four he had. I had only just accomplished it (he hasn’t even seen it yet.)

I don’t think he would mind me showing it. It is free advertising after all.
I took liberties with the chemistry, as I hadn’t seen the Aberfan Report. But coal mines are notoriously dangerous places.

And here is what went on between me and this friend:

I went to a writing group with Roy Smith a local author after visiting at his home and talking about getting a book published online. He came up with his latest work and we had a competition to see who could write a short article. I typed them out on a computer as he doesn’t use one and brought them to that meeting to show him.

The meet was at a local library where there is a computer bank.

***

 

 

Red Ash

 

A story of the Potteries Pyramids

 

 

Where there was a coal mine a village would develop. In my own area of North Staffordshire, there were plenty; slag heaps would loom large on the skyline, alongside a tower with a large wheel that was on the top. They looked like large black monster pyramids. Some people would compare them to the ones in Egypt, they looked the same but people have forgotten about the lives that were lost by the slaves who had to build them.

 

 

Tourists should remember the cost of human life while building them instead of admiring the structures and treasures. So when I looked at the coal waste monsters on the horizon, I remembered all the miners that were crippled or killed erecting them.

 

 

My mind wanders back to the day of the Aberfan disaster, all those innocent children and also my friend that was killed. He was brought in to bulldoze the tip of the slag heap to flatten it, but it was not going to be easy.

 

 

To explain, we have to go back to the depths of the mine where the miners would fill the tubs with coal and then send it up to the surface. Men would sort through the coal into various grades, good, not so good, and the rest would be classed as waste, so the waste would go to the tip, and that is where we get the so called “Slag Heaps” from, and that is how those black pyramids were formed.

 

 

I remember as a child, when most of us were “not so well off” we would go round collecting the odd piece of coal that had, during the separation process, fallen from the wagons. The security officer would very often chase us, but we were too quick for him, and we would go back for more coal. There were sometimes accidents, I can recall one man who was after some coal getting killed when a large piece came rolling down and crushed his skull. It did not stop us from looking for pieces of coal, and we continued to take risks in an attempt to keep warm.

 

 

On the outside of this monster which we had called the slag heap, the weather had caused it to change colour which was what in various parts of the city you see them black, black ash as it was named, it was a useful commodity to the construction trade but inside, the waste became active due to the gases and the sulphur, and also the sheer pressure created combustion. These elements created heat that turned it into what we now call the dreadful Red Ash. It was the heat and the toxics that gave it the change of colour and underneath, its dreadful smell. When it moved it would expand, and the rain would create a landslide. Its strength was enormous; it could lift houses and roads even thick concrete floors.

 

 

It broke the hearts of many a couple who had a mortgage, as their homes became uninhabitable, and they had not got any money to have them re-built or repaired, as the cost was beyond most people’s reach, and no one would consider buying a house with red ash in it because of that reason. The mortgage companies also wanted a certificate to prove that there was no red ash present in the property, or it had been removed by a reputable builder.

 

 

The councils, who had initially passed red ash as a suitable hardcore, had never tested it suitable for the purpose of using it in domestic properties. We have moved on since then, and there are now many safety rules put into place when buying properties to protect everyone involved, and we hope, save any heartache.

 

 

Standing there, in front of this “Black Monster” I was so proud that I had been chosen as the engineer to demolish it. I likened myself to John Wayne, the hero of a thousand westerns, always given the job of bringing the baddie to justice.

 

 

The baddie was the black mountain I was looking at, and I thought, “you will never harm anyone again you horrible black monster”.

 

 

How wrong I was, even ten years later it raised its head again so “John Wayne” was sent for once again.

 

 

Roy Smith.

 

 

711 words 3791 characters.

 

 

 

***

 

 

 

 

Red Ash

 

A story of the Potteries Pyramids

 

 

 

There are few pictures of them now but spoil tips loomed large on the skyline of every mining village in North Staffordshire, alongside a tower with a large wheel. Black monster pyramids. They looked the same as the ones in Egypt but who remembers the lives lost building them?

 

 

I did!

 

I’d read the report of the Aberfan disaster, the innocent children and, soon, my friend killed by them.

 

 

Coal was graded as: good, not so good, and waste.

 

The waste was just tipped at the mine; the “Slag Heaps” I remember as a child. We were poor and would collect the spilled coal. I can recall a man killed when a large stone rolled down and crushed his skull. It didn’t stop us from taking risks.

 

 

The waste was later used as hard-core in construction but hadn’t been tested as suitable for use in domestic properties. Chemicals in it could react like slow gunpowder, turning it to Red Ash. Its strength was enormous; it could lift thick concrete floors, even houses and roads. It broke the hearts of many as their homes became uninhabitable. Who would buy an house with red ash?

 

 

I had been chosen as the engineer to demolish one; the hero of a thousand westerns, bringing down the baddie: “You won’t harm anyone again you horrible black monster”.

 

How wrong I was as ten years later it raised its head again…

 

 

235 words 1289 characters.

 

 

I can’t think of everything.

 

2Qtr May 17 19:54 NM May 25 12:26     1960 22 May Valdivia, Chile 1960 Valdivia earthquake 9.5
1Qtr Mar 20 20:39 Fm Mar 28 02:48     1964 27 March Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA 1964 Alaska earthquake 9.2
Dec 18 16:40 Dec 26 15:06     2004 26 December Indian Ocean, Sumatra, Indonesia 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake 9.1–9.3
FM Nov 1 23:10 2Qtr Nov 9 15:43     1952 4 November Kamchatka, Russia (then USSR) 1952 Kamchatka earthquakes 9.0[3]
ar 4 20:46 Mar 12 23:45     2011 11 March Pacific Ocean, Tōhoku region, Japan 2011 Tōhoku earthquake 9.0[4][5][6]
      1611 2 December Pacific ocean, Hokkaido, Japan 1611 Sanriku earthquake 8.9- (est.)
      1615 16 September Arica, Chile (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1615 Arica earthquake 8.8 (est.)
1Qtr Apr 1 23:46 FM Apr 8 16:43     1762 2 April Chittagong, Bangladesh (then Kingdom of Mrauk U) 1762 Arakan earthquake 8.8 (est.)
1st Qtr Nov 19 07:49 FM Nov 27 07:08     1833 25 November Sumatra, Indonesia (then part of the Dutch East Indies) 1833 Sumatra earthquake 8.8–9.2 (est.)
NM Jan 24 17:09 1QtrFeb 1 12:31     1906 31 January Ecuador – Colombia 1906 Ecuador-Colombia earthquake 8.8
Feb 22 00:42 Feb 28 16:38     2010 27 February Bio-Bio, Chile 2010 Chile earthquake 8.8
      1700 26 January Pacific Ocean, USA and Canada (then part of the British Empire) 1700 Cascadia earthquake 8.7–9.2 (est.)[7]
      1707 28 October Pacific Ocean, Shikoku region, Japan 1707 Hōei earthquake 8.7-9.3 (est.)
FM Jun 30 08:49 2Qtr Jul 7 03:01 NM Jul 15 04:54     1730 8 July Valparaiso, Chile (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1730 Valparaiso earthquake 8.7 (est.)[8]
2Qtr Oct 28 06:57 Nm Nov 4 03:09     1755 1 November Atlantic Ocean, Lisbon, Portugal 1755 Lisbon earthquake 8.7 (est.)[9]
NM Feb 1 16:36 1Qtr Feb 9 08:53     1965 4 February Rat Islands, Alaska, USA 1965 Rat Islands earthquake 8.7
      869 9 July Pacific Ocean, Tōhoku region, Japan 869 Sanriku earthquake 8.6-9.0 (est.)
      1746 28 October Lima, Peru (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1746 Lima-Callao earthquake 8.6-8.8 (est.)
      1787 28 March Oaxaca, Mexico (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1787 Mexico earthquake 8.6-8.7 (est.)
2Qtr Mar 25 22:37 NM Apr 2 04:37     1946 1 April Aleutian Islands, Alaska, USA 1946 Aleutian Islands earthquake 8.6
NM Aug 13 16:48 2Qtr Aug 20 15:35     1950 15 August Assam, India – Tibet, China 1950 Assam – Tibet earthquake 8.6
NM Mar 1 16:12 1Qtr Mar 9 11:50     1957 9 March Andreanof Islands, Alaska, USA 1957 Andreanof Islands earthquake 8.6
Mar 25 20:58 Apr 2 00:50     2005 28 March Sumatra, Indonesia 2005 Sumatra earthquake 8.6
Feb 22 00:42 Feb 28 16:38     2012 11 April Indian Ocean, Sumatra, Indonesia 2012 Aceh earthquake 8.6
      1575 16 December Valdivia, Chile (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1575 Valdivia earthquake 8.5 (est.)
      1604 24 November Arica, Chile (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1604 Arica earthquake 8.5 (est.)
      1647 13 May Santiago, Chile (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1647 Santiago earthquake 8.5 (est.)
      1751 24 May Concepción, Chile (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1751 Concepción earthquake 8.5 (est.)
NM Nov 13 18:21 1Qtr Nov 21 23:10     1822 19 November Valparaíso, Chile 1822 Valparaíso earthquake 8.5 (est.)
FM Feb 13 11:00 2Qtr Feb 20 04:52     1835 20 February Concepción, Chile 1835 Concepción earthquake 8.5 (est.)
NM Feb 9 20:05 1Qtr Feb 18 00:20     1861 16 February Sumatra, Indonesia 1861 Sumatra earthquake 8.5
2Qtr Aug 11 12:29 NM Aug 18 05:12     1868 13 August Arica, Chile (then Peru) 1868 Arica earthquake 8.5–9.0 (est.)[10]
2Qtr May 5 11:19 NM May 13 05:29     1877 9 May Iquique, Chile (then Peru) 1877 Iquique earthquake 8.5-9.0 (est.)
FM Nov 4 18:36 2Qtr Nov 12 07:52     1922 10 November Atacama Region, Chile 1922 Vallenar earthquake 8.5[11]
NM Jan 31 13:35 1Qtr Feb 8 00:33     1938 1 February Banda Sea, Indonesia (then part of the Dutch East Indies) 1938 Banda Sea earthquake 8.5
2Qtr Oct 9 19:27 NM Oct 17 12:43     1963 13 October Kuril Islands, Russia (USSR) 1963 Kuril Islands earthquake 8.5[12]
Sep 11 12:44 Sep 19 16:48     2007 12 September Sumatra, Indonesia 2007 Sumatra earthquakes 8.5
      1687 20 October Lima, Peru (then part of the Spanish Empire) 1687 Peru earthquake 8.4-8.7 (est.)
2Qtr May 13 16:21 NM May 20 23:43     1841 18 May Kamchatka, Russia 1841 Kamchatka earthquakes 8.4-8.6(est.)
      1737 17 October Kamchatka, Russia 1737 Kamchatka earthquakes 8.3-9.0(est.)
FM Feb 1 15:53 2Qtr Feb 8 09:16     1923 3 February Kamchatka, Russia (USSR) 1923 Kamchatka earthquakes 8.3-8.5[12]
      1361 3 August Pacific Ocean, Shikoku region, Japan 1361 Shōhei earthquake 8.2-8.5 (est.)
      1498 20 September Pacific Ocean, Tōkai region, Japan 1498 Meiō Nankaidō earthquake 8.2-8.5 (est.)
NM Jun 11 08:43 1Qtr Jun 18 11:41     1896 15 June Pacific Ocean, Tōhoku region, Japan 1896 Sanriku earthquake 8.2-8.5(est.)
FM Jul 16 15:31 2Qtr Jul 24 13:08     1905 23 July Uvs Province, Mongolia 1905 Bulnay earthquake

8.2-8.5

 

 

 

 

I really hate the interface on this site, it is as clunky as lead boots.

I was arranging the times of the lunar phases with the dates of the major earthquakes in recent history when I came to the one for 1730. This one occurred the day after the time of the phase. So I copied the two phases and dates for them either side of the quake when I realised that the cause of the quake was in the lead UP to the time of it and very little to do with much afterwards. (Yes of course I already knew that but if I wasn’t stupid I would have given this job up decades ago.)

So now I have to go through the whole thing again with the previous )phases included (And where do I start with them?

Before a severe earthquake the weather will have been acting very odd for months. What I am looking for is a sharp piece of dried grass, in an haystack.