Big Quake Coming For U.S.?

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Big Quake Coming For U.S.?</font size>
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Geophysicists Learn from Chile, Haiti Quakes to
Better Prepare for Next Major Catastrophe to Strike U.S.</font size></center>


CBS News
March 1, 2010


(CBS) With major seismic events in Haiti and Chile occurring so close together, and relatively close to the United States, is another major earthquake due to strike our country?

On CBS' "The Early Show" this morning, Dr. Marcia McNutt, a geophysicist and director of the U.S. Geological Survey, said <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">it is not a matter of if, but when Americans will face a similar event. </span>

"Every time one of these earthquakes happens to our neighbors, we do learn something," she told anchor Harry Smith. "And as tragic as these events are, and our hearts go out to the people of Haiti as well as to the people of Chile, we have been learning a lot from both of these events."

The U.S. Geological Survey tracks seismic activity around the globe, including the dozens of powerful aftershocks that have been occurring since Saturday's 8.8-magnitude quake. The death toll is currently more than 700.

The USGS' Earthquake Hazards Program analyzes data obtained from earthquakes and their aftermath to study quake characteristics, to help mitigate the losses in death, injury and property damage from such events.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">When asked if there is more seismic activity recently, McNutt said, "Well, yes. I think we do sense that there is a lot happening right now. </span>I mean, I think the people at the USGS just wish we'd sort of have a break right now, with a major earthquake in January and now one in February.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">"We do know that earthquakes are not completely randomly distributed in space as well as time. And this does seem to be a sort of active period. But if you look at it through the lens of geologic time, it does average out." </span>

The Earth's plates are in constant motion, said Dr. McNutt, so seismic shifts of this magnitude are expected to happen on an irregular basis. The quake occurred at the interface of the Nazca and South American tectonic plates (which are converging at a rate of 80 mm a year), when the sea floor slides underneath the South American continent.

Coastal Chile has experienced 13 quakes of magnitude 7.0 or greater since 1973. The largest earthquake ever recorded by instrument, in May 1960, happened here when a 9.5-magnitude event killed 1,655 people and generated tsunami waves that killed dozens more across the Pacific. Central Chile also experienced an 8.5-mag. earthquake in November 1922, which killed several hundred and created a 30-foot tsunami.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">At some point, Dr. McNutt said, the United States will have a quake, perhaps not as large as Chile's, but just as devastating because of population density. </SPAN>

Every time one of these disasters hits, we have to use it to better prepare ourselves, said Dr. McNutt. This quake in Chile is so very much like a disaster that could hit us, because Chile is a well-prepared country, just like the U.S., with good building codes.

Scientists have said that the energy released by Saturday's quake is 500 times that released by the 7.0-magnitude earthquake that struck Haiti. But Chileans benefited from the fact that the coastal epicenter of the quake was located just off-shore, and much further down under the sea bed.

Also beneficial was Chile's infrastructure. Although half a million homes were damaged, buildings survived in much better condition than did Haiti's, thanks to stringent building codes.

"While the earthquake in Chile was a little deeper, we are talking about an absolutely massive earthquake compared to the one in Port-au-Prince," said Dr. McNutt. "And had the buildings in Chile been built to the standards of the ones in Haiti, that massive earthquake would have caused untold destruction.



"The good news there is, with the building codes they had in Chile, they are going come out so much better than would have been the case. That is basically what we're seeing coming out of Chile, is that the vast majority of the buildings did stand."

Chile's transportation infrastructure took a big hit, as seen in the collapsed bridges and highways.

It should be a wake-up call to the U.S., noted Dr. McNutt, given the fragile state of America's infrastructure even before a quake.

The U.S. Department of Transportation's 2008 report on the state of our highways found that nearly 14% of the nation's bridges are "functionally obsolete," with another 12% "structurally deficient."


http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/03/01/earlyshow/main6254968.shtml
 
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Fact Check: Eastern U.S. earthquake risk</font size></center>



t1larg.skyline.afp.gi.jpg

Could Manhattan's famous skyline be at risk from a major earthquake?


C a b l e N e w s N e t w o r k
By Chris Mould, CNN
February 10, 2010


<font size="3">(CNN) -- A magnitude-3.8 earthquake struck northern Illinois early Wednesday, shaking homes and buildings and rattling plenty of nerves.

Doug Dupont of Belvidere, Illinois, about 70 miles northwest of downtown Chicago, said it shook him out of bed and left a crack in his kitchen wall.

"It was really scary. It felt like a train was going by our house," Dupont said. "This is not California. This is northern Illinois. We are not supposed to get earthquakes."

The CNN Fact Check Desk wondered: Are earthquakes east of the Rocky Mountains unlikely, or was Tuesday's predawn quake in Illinois a wake-up call for Easterners?

  • <font size="3"><SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">The U.S. Geological Survey says earthquakes pose "a significant risk to 75 million Americans in 39 states."</span></font size>

  • <font size="3">Of the 26 U.S. urban areas deemed at risk for significant seismic activity, nearly one-third are east of the Rockies, including New York; Boston, Massachusetts; St. Louis, Missouri; Memphis, Chattanooga and Knoxville, Tennessee; and Charleston, South Carolina.</font size>

  • <font size="3">One of the most active eastern quake zones is the New Madrid seismic zone, winding southward from Illinois and Missouri down through west Tennessee and Arkansas. It unleashed a series of magnitude-8.0 quakes in 1811-12.</font size>

Seismologists say we can expect one that big every 200 to 300 years. And quakes in the 6.0 range come every 80 years or so. The last one in the area was in 1895, 115 years ago.

  • <font size="3">Others worth noting: A magnitude-7.3 quake in Charleston in 1886 and a magnitude-5.8 quake in northern New York state in 1944. </font size>

  • <font size="3">Although earthquakes may be less frequent in the eastern U.S., the SGS says urban areas in the East could face bigger losses because the shaking would affect much larger areas than similar quakes in the West. In addition, most homes and buildings in the East are not designed to withstand earthquakes.</font size>

Bottom Line:<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00"> Much of the eastern U.S. is at risk, not only for smaller quakes but major ones as well. History books tell us they've happened before, and seismologists assure us more will come. In fact, USGS statistics indicate that many areas in the East are overdue for a significant seismic event.</span></font size>




http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/02/10/earthquake.fact.check/?hpt=T2
 
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A 6.9 has been recorded in Baja -- south of San Diego, California; the earthquake has been felt in Los Angeles, Sacramento and in Arizona.

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6.9-Magnitude Quake in Baja
California Felt on West Coast</font size></center>



By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD
Published: April 4, 2010



LOS ANGELES - An earthquake centered in Baja California in Mexico shook buildings as far north as Los Angeles Sunday afternoon.

The earthquake was centered in the Baja California, about 108 miles east-southeast of Tijuana, the United States Geological Service said. The quake had a magnitude of 6.9.

High-rise buildings in Los Angeles and San Diego rocked back and forth as the quake hit. The earthquake shook houses in Los Angeles for roughly a minute, and aftershocks then followed.

There were no immediate reports of damage or injury. KABC-TV reported some people were stuck in an elevator at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim.

The Los Angeles Fire Department went on earthquake alert and began inspecting overpasses for damage.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/05/us/05quake.html
 
Rash Of Recent Earthquakes Just Coincidence, Experts Say

Rash Of Recent Earthquakes Just Coincidence, Experts Say
Contributed by The Epoch Times (Reporter)
March 9, 2010 2:29

The last several weeks have seen devastating earthquakes in Haiti, Chile, Taiwan, and now Turkey, but there is little cause for concern, experts have said.

An earthquake measuring 6.0 on the Richter scale hit Turkey on Monday, killing dozens.

It follows two months of major earthquakes, including the Chilean earthquake, measuring 8.8, and the Haiti earthquake measuring 7.0.

Four days ago, Taiwan saw widespread power cuts after being rattled by a magnitude 6.4 earthquake.

Seismologists estimate that there are tens of thousands of large and small earthquakes a year, but many of them are not felt because they are deep below the surface of the earth or in the middle of wide oceans.

Of the major earthquakes, there are around 18 earthquakes a year of magnitude 7.0 or higher, said Don Blakeman, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey.

"Although earthquakes are not random in location, they are random in their timing," said Blakeman. "I think we are at a time now where we are seeing a cluster of them all happening at the same time."

Jon Davidson, a professor of Earth Sciences at the Durham University, in the U.K., said that the Chilean earthquake may have been triggered by aftershocks from the Haiti earthquake—but the link between these two and others around the world is probably coincidence.

"There are a large number of earthquakes taking place everywhere in the world all the time," he said. "However most of them are deep below the surface or are in remote areas, and aren't reported on.

"It just so happens that we've had a few big ones around the same time."

http://beforeitsnews.com/news/23408/Rash_of_Recent_Earthquakes_Just_Coincidence,_Experts_Say.html
 
Re: Do Big Quakes Increase Global Seismic Activity?

Rash Of Recent Earthquakes Just Coincidence, Experts Say

Contributed by The Epoch Times (Reporter)
March 9, 2010 2:29



Thanks for the reassurance. I live in hurricane alley, but we know when they're enroute. These quakes are seriously scary unpredictable occurences.

QueEx
 
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