The earthquake in the Los Angeles area on May 17, 2009 measured 4.7 on the Richter scale. It was originally estimated at 5.0, but was quickly confirmed as 4.7. It had a 3.1 aftershock that was felt as far as San Diego. USGS estimates that it
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A. We simply upgrade your scales. The cabled version, SC-2, can be upgraded to the wireless version, the SC-2/BT, with the addition of a wireless module inside the scale.
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Yes. First, make a backup copy of your image files. Then, use the following procedure (given for version 4.23 software- other versions are similar): Start Z, go to offline, open the image file you want to change, go to Modify Parameter. The
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A. The SC-2/BT has a Class 1 output power level with a nominal range of 300 feet. That is an open field distance. Having the wireless signal travel through the walls of a house dramatically reduces the actual range. Each installation is different.
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Not the same. Read below. Earthquakes are measured by their intensity and magnitude. An earthquake's intensity readings are based on observed effects, for example, ground shaking and damage. An earthquake's intensity differs in separate locations,
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Yes. IAS can be used in many different environments, from the small business all the way up to the largest ISP. For more information, see the section on Performance and IAS.
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OBJECTIVES: 1) To determine if the neuropathic pain scale (NPS) can be used to classify chronic pain patients (CPPs) as having primarily neuropathic vs non-neuropathic pain, and furthermore; 2) to determine what, if any, cut-off score can be used
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We use Fahrenheit because the US still uses the old British System of measurement, and can't afford or is just too lazy to convert everything if Congress did change it to the Metric System. ========== Here's the article on our history with the
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The grade of A is the highest possible grade; grades of D+ or lower will not be allowed for graduate work. Plus (+) or minus (-) symbols are used to indicate grades that fall above or below the letter grades. The grades of A+, F+, and F- are not
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The Richter scale was developed in the 1940s by American scientists Beno Gutenberg and Charles Richter in order to gauge scientifically the intensity of individual earthquakes. The idea behind the Richter scale is that the energy released by an
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