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In A Link to the Past, the Quake Medallion can be found in the Lake of Ill Omen, where a circle of stones lies in the water. By throwing a skull into the circle, Link will awaken the Catfish, who will offer him the medallion in order to be left alone. The Quake Medallion causes an earthquake resulting from Link thrusting the Master Sword into the ground. It only affects ground-bound enemies, generally either destroying them or turning them into a Slime. Using the Quake Medallion near certain trees will cause them to yield various items, as if Link ran into them with his Pegasus Boots. The Quake Medallion is used to open the entrance to the Turtle Rock.


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In Four Swords Adventures, the Quake Medallion triggers an earthquake that turns enemies into Zols. It can be found in the Death Mountain Foothills, where it can be used to defeat a group of Hinoxes. The Quake Medallion appears again in Frozen Hyrule, where it can be used to defeat a group of Bow Soldiers.

I've always wondered ever since quake 1 and 2 came out...are they in the doom universe?I always figured that the events of quake 1 and 2 took place many years after final doom.

Anyone have any theories?

You can always take that QDoom mod and claim Quake as Doom-common world.


What's to stop you? You're already doing tons of Wolfdoom stuff. What about Doomquake stuff? What about doing it into Quake?? Quake with JDoom model monsters (of course properly converted to the wanted format)! Yeah!!


EDIT: For starters, nothing's to stop you, as a mapper, from importing shareware Quake textures and putting slipgates and medieval stone worlds into Doom. It's already done, in fact. All that's left is the Quake monsters, but maybe they're already done too. By using a powerful port (ZDoom or JDoom suffices), you can realize your dream.

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According to latest Government figures, the 6.4 magnitude earthquake that struck shortly before midnight on 3 November claimed 153 lives and injured more than 338 people. In addition, a 5.8 magnitude aftershock hit the affected areas, exacerbating fear among the survivors, in particular children.

Both scenarios the team reported are worrisome, Briggs said. A single large quake can cause very high ground motions that need to be considered when designing buildings. And a large quake on the heels of another earthquake could deal a blow to buildings and infrastructure that have already been weakened, as witnessed earlier this year in Trkiye and Syria.

New designs for tall buildings may need to factor in the possibility of a large shock or back-to-back quakes. Chang said she expects this new information will also be considered the next time that USGS scientists revise their ground motion maps, which the city bases its building codes on.

The United Nations on Tuesday announced that it has conducted 200 cross-border missions delivering aid into northwest Syria from Trkiye since the devastating earthquakes that struck the two countries in February.

A USGS Earthquake Science Center Mobile Laser Scanning truck scans the surface rupture near the zone of maximum surface displacement of the magnitude 7.1 Searles Valley earthquake that struck the Ridgecrest, California area. Credit: USGS / Ben Brooks

However, says Lundgren, the Fort Tejon segment of the San Andreas Fault that is nearest to the Central Valley last ruptured in 1857, so given the erratic nature of earthquakes along the fault and the great variability in time between events, with our current level of knowledge, scientists are far from understanding when and where the next large earthquake will occur on it.

The rapid movement of glaciers has also been shown to cause what are known as glacial earthquakes. Glacial earthquakes in Greenland peak in frequency in the summer months and have been steadily increasing over time, possibly in response to global warming.

Induced seismicity can also occur when human water applications lubricate a fault. Studies by USGS and other institutions have linked sharp increases in earthquake activity in Oklahoma and other Midwest and Eastern U.S. states in recent years to increases in the practice of injecting wastewater into the ground during petroleum operations. Injection wells place fluids underground into porous geologic formations, where scientists believe they can sometimes enter buried faults that are ready to slip, changing the pore pressure on them and causing them to slip.

Still, two decades ago, a state advisory panel concluded the benefit of preventing an estimated two dozen gas-sparked fires in a major quake would be outweighed by the costs. The panel worried about the extended delays in restoring service, in part from crews having to go out and relight pilot lights for tens of thousands of undamaged homes.

But so far, Los Angeles is the only big city in California to require automatic shutoff devices to be installed on new projects. The mandate came after 50 gas fed fires erupted following the 1994 Northridge earthquake.

State Department spokesperson Matt Miller confirmed Monday that the Moroccan government has still not taken the United States up on its offer to provide support in its earthquake relief despite direct outreach from Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

The researchers carried out a simulation study using Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment data and hydrological models. Gahalaut told Nature India  that, according to the study, groundwater extraction in the Ganga basin modulates the stress accumulation process on the Main Himalayan Thrust (MHT), beneath the Himalayan arc where earthquakes originate.

Interestingly, according to the report, the groundwater unloading rate is about six times more in the Ganga basin in comparison to that in the San Joaquin Valley, California. "The Nepal case under our analysis is also similar to that of the magnitude 5.1 earthquake which occurred in Lorca, southeast Spain, wherein the role of extensive groundwater extraction causing crustal unloading was implicated."

"Present study implies that the 2015 Nepal earthquake and probably all earthquakes occurring on the MHT beneath the Himalayan arc are influenced (by human activities) related to groundwater extraction in the Indo-Gangetic plains," the report concludes.

C.P. Rajendran, a geophysicist at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research in Bengaluru says the study is a refreshingly out-of-the-box approach to understand the triggering of the 2015 April 25 Nepal earthquake."But the validation of this model requires crucial evidence that would suggest linkages of extraction of groundwater since 1960 and the rate of change of seismicity in the Himalaya during the last 50 years."

Rajendran points out there is no evidence to suggest the incidences of 2015-type earthquakes in the Himalaya have picked up in the last 50 years and "we also lack details of near-source groundwater changes to compliment the far-field data."

The magnitude-5.1 earthquake at 2:41 p.m. startled Southern Californians who were already braced for the remnant of Hurricane Hilary, which had already brought hours of steady rain during the region's driest month of the year. There were at least a dozen aftershocks of magnitude-3.0 or greater.

The earthquake occurred at the same time as a rare tropical storm hit the Los Angeles area for the first time in decades. For the first time ever, Southern California is under a tropical storm warning, and most of Los Angeles County is under a flash flood warning with rain expected into Sunday night.

Millions of Southern Californian's received urgent back-to-back emergency alerts on their phones Sunday -- the first indicated a flash flood warning, the second warning of the Ventura County earthquake.

While relatively rare compared to earthquakes caused by wastewater disposal in oil and gas fields in the central United States, Michael Brudzinski of Miami University in Ohio and his colleagues have identified more than 600 small earthquakes (between magnitude 2.0 and 3.8) in these states.

Brudzinski said these earthquakes may be "underappreciated" compared to seismicity related to wastewater disposal since they appear to happen less frequently. He and his colleagues are studying the trends related to the likelihood of induced seismicity from hydraulic fracturing or fracking, which could help industry and state regulators better manage drilling practices.

Unconventional U.S. oil production, which extracts oil from shales and tight rocks using a variety of drilling techniques, has been linked to an increase in human-induced earthquakes across the mid-continent of the United States for nearly a decade. Researchers studying the increase in places such as Oklahoma think that the main driver of this increase in seismicity is the injection of wastewater produced by extraction back into rock layers, which increases pore pressure within rocks and can affect stress along faults in layers selected for disposal.

The numerous fracking wells in eastern Ohio prompted Brudzinski and his colleagues to take a closer look at whether small earthquakes in the region could be connected to fracking operations. "The wells are more widely spaced when they're active, and there isn't as much wastewater disposal going on," Brudzinski explained, "so you can see a bit more specifically and directly when wastewater disposal is generating seismicity and when hydraulic fracturing is generating seismicity in the Appalachian Basin." be457b7860

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