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Unassimilated Notes For Quakes

 


UNASSIMILATED FACTOIDS FROM USGS AND OTHER SOURCES

 

The *largest recorded earthquake in the United States* was a magnitude 9.2 that struck Prince William Sound, Alaska on Good Friday, March 28, 1964 UTC. 2. The *largest recorded earthquake in the world* was a magnitude 9.5 (Mw) in Chile on May 22, 1960. California 3. The *earliest reported earthquake in California* was felt in 1769 by the exploring expedition of Gaspar de Portola while the group was camping about 48 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of Los Angeles. 4. Before electronics allowed recordings of large earthquakes, scientists built large *spring-pendulum seismometers* in an attempt to record the long-period motion produced by such quakes. The largest one weighed about 15 tons. There is a medium-sized one three stories high in Mexico City that is still in operation. 5. The *average rate of motion across the San Andreas Fault Zone* during the past 3 million years is 56 mm/yr (2 in/yr). This is about the same rate at which your fingernails grow. Assuming this rate continues, scientists project that Los Angeles and San Francisco will be adjacent to one another in approximately 15 million years. 6. The *East African Rift System* is a 50-60 km (31-37 miles) wide zone of active volcanics and faulting that extends north-south in eastern Africa for more than 3000 km (1864 miles) from Ethiopia in the north to Zambezi in the south. It is a rare example of an active continental rift zone, where a continental plate is attempting to split into two plates which are moving away from one another. P waves 7. The *first "pendulum seismoscope"* to measure the shaking of the ground during an earthquake was developed in 1751, and it wasn't until 1855 that faults were recognized as the source of earthquakes. 8. *Moonquakes* ("earthquakes" on the moon) do occur, but they happen less frequently and have smaller magnitudes than earthquakes on the Earth. It appears they are related to the tidal stresses associated with the varying distance between the Earth and Moon. They also occur at great depth, about halfway between the surface and the center of the moon. 9. Although both are sea waves, a *tsunami and a tidal wave* are two different unrelated phenomenona. A tidal wave is a shallow water wave caused by the gravitational interactions between the Sun, Moon, and Earth. A tsunami is a sea wave caused by an underwater earthquake or landslide (usually triggered by an earthquake) displacing the ocean water. 10. The *hypocenter* of an earthquake is the location beneath the earth's surface where the rupture of the fault begins. The *epicenter* of an earthquake is the location directly above the hypocenter on the surface of the earth. Pacific Basin 11. The *greatest mountain range* is the Mid-Ocean Ridge, extending 64,374 km (40,000 mi) from the Arctic Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean, around Africa, Asia, and Australia, and under the Pacific Ocean to the west coast of North America. It has a greatest height of 4207 m (13,800 ft) above the base ocean depth. 12. The world's *greatest land mountain range* is the Himalaya-Karakoram. It countains 96 of the world's 109 peaks of over 7317 m (24,000 ft). The longest range is the Andes of South America which is 7564 km (4700 mi) in length. Both were created bythe movement of tectonic plates. 13. It is estimated that there are *500,000 detectable earthquakes* in the world each year. 100,000 of those can be felt, and 100 of them cause damage. 14. It is thought that more damage was done by the resulting fire after the *1906 San Francisco earthquake* than by the earthquake itself. 15. A *seiche* (pronounced SAYSH) is what happens in the swimming pools of Californians during and after an earthquake. It is "an internal wave oscillating in a body of water" or, in other words, it is the sloshing of the water in your swimming pool, or any body of water, caused by the ground shaking in an earthquake. It may continue for a few moments or hours, long after the generating force is gone. A seiche can also be caused by wind or tides. mid-Atlantic Ridge 16. Each year the *southern California area has about 10,000 earthquakes*. Most of them are so small that they are not felt. Only several hundred are greater than magnitude 3.0, and only about 15-20 are greater than magnitude 4.0. If there is a large earthquake, however, the aftershock sequence will produce many more earthquakes of all magnitudes for many months. 17. The *magnitude* of an earthquake is a measured value of the earthquake size. The magnitude is the same no matter where you are, or how strong or weak the shaking was in various locations. The *intensity* of an earthquake is a measure of the shaking created by the earthquake, and this value does vary with location. 18. The *Wasatch Range*, with its outstanding ski areas, runs North-South through Utah, and like all mountain ranges it was produced by a series of earthquakes. The 386 km (240-mile)-long Wasatch Fault is made up of several segments, each capable of producing up to a M7.5 earthquake. During the past 6000 years, there has been a M6.5+ about once every 350 years, and it has been 150 years since the last powerful earthquake. 19. There is no such thing as *"earthquake weather"*. Statistically, there is an equal distribution of earthquakes in cold weather, hot weather, rainy weather, etc. Furthermore, there is no physical way that the weather could affect the forces several miles beneath the surface of the earth. The changes in barometric pressure in the atmosphere are very small compared to the forces in the crust, and the effect of the barometric pressure does not reach beneath the soil. 20. From 1975-1995 there were only *four states that did not have any earthquakes*. They were: Florida, Iowa, North Dakota, and Wisconsin. 21. The *core of the earth* was the first internal structural element to be identified. In 1906 R.D. Oldham discovered it from his studies of earthquake records. The inner core is solid, and the outer core is liquid and so does not transmit the shear wave energy released during an earthquake. S Amer 22. The swimming pool at the University of Arizona in Tucson lost water from sloshing (seiche) caused by the *1985 M8.1 Michoacan, Mexico earthquake* 2000 km (1240 miles) away. 23. Earthquakes occur in the central portion of the United States too! Some very powerful earthquakes occurred along the New Madrid fault in the *Mississippi Valley in 1811-1812*. The effects of shaking from these magnitude 8+ earthquakes caused church bells to ring in Boston, Massachusetts, nearly 1600 km (1000 miles) away. 24. Most earthquakes occur at depths of *less than 80 km (50 miles)* from the Earth's surface. 25. The *San Andreas fault is NOT a single, continuous fault*, but rather is actually a fault zone made up of many segments. Movement may occur along any of the many fault segments along the zone at any time. The San Andreas fault system is more that 1300 km (800 miles) long, and in some spots is as much as 16 km (10 miles) deep. 26. The *world's deadliest recorded earthquake* occurred in 1556 in central China. It struck a region where most people lived in caves carved from soft rock. These dwellings collapsed during the earthquake, killing an estimated 830,000 people. In 1976 another deadly earthquake struck in Tangshan, China, where more than 250,000 people were killed. 27. Florida and North Dakota have the *smallest number of earthquakes* in the United States. ocean-cont collision 28. The *deepest earthquakes* typically occur at plate boundaries where the Earth's crust is being subducted into the Earth's mantle. These occur as deep as 750 km (400 miles) below the surface. 29. Alaska is the *most earthquake-prone state* and one of the most seismically active regions in the world. Alaska experiences a magnitude 7 earthquake almost every year, and a magnitude 8 or greater earthquake on average every 14 years. 30. The *majority of the earthquakes and volcanic eruptions* occur along plate boundaries such as the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American plate. One of the most active plate boundaries where earthquakes and eruptions are frequent, for example, is around the massive Pacific Plate commonly referred to as the Pacific Ring of Fire. 31. The *earliest recorded evidence of an earthquake* has been traced back to 1831 BC in the Shandong province of China, but there is a fairly complete record starting in 780 BC during the Zhou Dynasty in China. 32. It was recognized as early as 350 BC by the Greek scientist Aristotle that *soft ground shakes more than hard rock* in an earthquake. 33. The *cause of earthquakes was stated correctly in 1760* by British engineer John Michell, one of the first fathers of seismology, in a memoir where he wrote that earthquakes and the waves of energy that they make are caused by "shifting masses of rock miles below the surface". 34. In 1663 the European settlers experienced their *first earthquake in America*. 35. Human beings can detect sounds in the frequency range 20-10,000 Hertz. If a P wave refracts out of the rock surface into the air, and it has a frequency in the audible range, it will be heard as a rumble. *Most earthquake waves have a frequency of less than 20 Hz*, so the waves themselves are usually not heard. Most of the rumbling noise heard during an earthquake is the building and its contents moving. 36. When the Chilean earthquake occurred in 1960, *seismographs recorded seismic waves that traveled all around the Earth*. These seismic waves shook the entire earth for many days! This phenomenon is called the free oscillation of the Earth. 37. The *San Andreas Fault was named* in 1895 by geologist A.C. Lawson. He named it after the San Andreas Lake, a sag pond through which the fault passes about 20 miles south of San Francisco. He likely did not realize at the time that the fault ran almost the entire length of California! 38. The *interior of Antarctica has icequakes* which, although they are much smaller, are perhaps more frequent than earthquakes in Antarctica. The icequakes are similar to earthquakes, but occur within the ice sheet itself instead of the land underneath the ice. Some of our polar observers have told us they can hear the icequakes and see them on the South Pole seismograph station, but they are much too small to be seen on enough stations to obtain a location.

 

Los Angeles Enjoying Seismic Lull

http://www.usc.edu/uscnews/stories/14160.html

08/24/07
Earthquakes under the basin at historic low, says a surprising new study by USC College professor James Dolan.
By Carl Marziali
James Dolan, right, and earth sciences professor Charles Sammis, one of his study's co-authors

Photo/Brian Morri
The Los Angeles basin appears to be in a seismic “lull” characterized by relatively smaller and infrequent earthquakes, according to a study in the September issue of Geology.

By contrast, the Mojave Desert is in a seismically active period. Seismic activity alternates between the two regions, the study suggests.

The lull in the Los Angeles basin began 1,000 years ago, said the authors, led by James Dolan, USC College associate professor of earth sciences.

“The past 1,000 years has been relatively quiet,” Dolan said, referring to what he calls the “urban fault network” under the Los Angeles metropolitan area.

The claim will come as news to anyone who has lived through a big quake in Southern California.

But Dolan said that even the Northridge earthquake of 1994, the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history at the time, was “a drop in the bucket” compared to the massive jolts that would strike the basin during a period of high seismic activity.

The study comes with some caveats. Among them:

• The urban fault network does not include the more distant San Andreas fault. Though the San Andreas is storing energy at a slower than average rate, a major quake along the fault is always possible. About 10 San Andreas “big ones” have occurred during the current lull on the urban fault network.

• The authors developed their theory from the discovery of several “clusters” of intense seismic activity in the geological record. It is not yet known if the clusters are statistically significant.

The authors studied the geological record going back 12,000 years. During that period, they found several clusters of seismic “bursts,” with the most recent lasting 4,000 years and ending about 1,000 years ago.

The seismic clusters were separated by periods of relative calm lasting about 1,500 to 2,000 years.

Remarkably, the lulls in the Los Angeles region corresponded with seismic clusters in the Mojave Desert, as described in 2000 by Thomas Rockwell of San Diego State University and his colleagues.

“When we're having earthquakes in L.A., generally we don't have as many earthquakes in the Mojave,” and vice versa, Dolan said.

The study in Geology proposes a mechanism by which periods of high seismic activity alternate between the urban fault network and the Mojave Desert.

The two main cogs in the mechanism are the section of the San Andreas fault north of Los Angeles and the desert fault system known as the eastern California shear zone.

Rapid motion along one fault causes slower motion along the other, the authors suggest. During relatively rare periods when the San Andreas fault is moving slowly, the strain in the urban fault network drops accordingly, leading to a seismic lull in Los Angeles and to more seismic activity in the desert.

“The San Andreas is always dominant. It's always the big brother,” Dolan said. “But at times the eastern California shear zone takes up its share of the load.”

During the current lull in Los Angeles, major earthquakes in the eastern California shear zone have included the magnitude 7.1 Hector Mine of 1999, the 7.3 Landers of 1992 and the 7.6 Owens Valley of 1872.

Each packed four to 20 times the energy of the Northridge quake.

While all three quakes occurred in sparsely populated areas, Palm Springs and other desert communities lie close to the eastern California shear zone and could be vulnerable.

“These are very large earthquakes,” Dolan said.

If the authors' theory is confirmed, detecting the start and end of a lull will become extremely important. Predicting the end of the current lull is impossible at present, Dolan said.

“We do know that the Mojave part of the eastern California shear zone is still storing energy much more rapidly than usual (by a factor of about two), so I would tend to doubt that the recent 1994 (magnitude) 6.7 Northridge and 1971 (magnitude) 6.7 San Fernando earthquakes indicate that we are coming out of' the current lull,” he said.

Dolan studies fault systems in Southern California and in Turkey, whose simpler fault geography helps Dolan to understand the “extremely complicated place” that he calls home.

In a 2003 study published in Science, he estimated the size and frequency of past earthquakes on the Puente Hills fault, one of the Los Angeles-area faults currently in a lull.

The study found that all four major earthquakes on the Puente Hills fault in the past 11,000 years exceeded magnitude 7.0.

“We're stuck with living here, so we have to understand what we can about this system,” Dolan said.

Dolan's co-authors were Charles Sammis, professor of earth sciences at USC College, and David Bowman, associate professor of geological sciences at California State University, Fullerton.

Funding for the research came from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Geological Survey through the Southern California Earthquake Center as well as from the California Department of Transportation and the City and County of Los Angeles.

Geology is published by the Geological Society of America.

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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