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Published byRoy Webb Modified over 9 years ago
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Earthquake Hazards And Earthquake Risks in the Central US Or, What Keeps Geologists Awake at Night….
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Earthquake Magnitude How much energy released Logarithmic scale M6 = ~30 x M5 M7 = ~1,000 x M5
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Earthquake Intensity How much energy delivered to any one site Subjective: depends on felt-reports from each location Many different intensities for same earthquake
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Earthquake Depth Range from shallow to deep (surface to ~800 km) Central US range 0 to 40 km Shallow = more energy and intensity at the surface Deep = less energy and intensity at the surface
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Earth’s Crust Thinner than an apple peel Floats on viscous mantle Pieces ‘bump and grind’ along plate edges plate tectonics Anomaly: Central US & others
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Earthquake Duration Felt for a few seconds – small earthquake, near epicenter Felt for several minutes – large earthquake, farther from epicenter Extreme earthquakes ‘ring the earth’ for hours
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Aftershocks & Series Occur after most larger earthquakes Become smaller and less frequent over time Can cause significant damage Central US: major earthquakes tend to occur in series
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Did You Feel It? April 18, 2008 4:36 am (CDT) Magnitude 5.4 Depth ~11 km Epicenter near Bellmont, Ill.
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Earthquake Locations Need three earthquake recordings (seismograms) Measure distance from each recorder Common point is approximate epicenter
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Earthquake Locations Regional velocity of earthquake waves is known Distance from epicenter is estimated More recordings = better accuracy
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Mississippi Embayment Very clear on maps! ‘Bedrock trough’ dips & widens to the SW New Madrid fault zone – ‘Bottom’ of trough – North end of trough Filled with sediments Mississippi River follows ‘easiest’ route
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New Madrid fault zone Southeast Missouri & northeast Arkansas Mississippi Embayment Old weakness in earth’s crust Active for hundreds of millions of years Activity continues now – 8-year ‘monitoring’ is inconsequential
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Central US Earthquakes New Madrid FZ – Three ‘dog-legs’ segments Wabash Valley FZ East Tennessee FZ Ste. Genevieve FZ ‘Background’ faults everywhere
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New Madrid 1811-12 Founded 1789; heavy forests Largest town between St. Louis & New Orleans Frequent floods and swamplands around it Heavy forests
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New Madrid Earthquakes Winter of 1811-12 Three earthquakes ~M7+ 1000s of aftershocks Wracked land, choked river Most people left the area
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New Madrid Earthquakes December 16, 1811 – ~mag 7.5 January 23, 1812 – ~mag 7.3 February 7, 1812 – ~mag 7.6
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Eliza Bryan Born Pennsylvania 1780 Arrived New Madrid 1791 Earthquakes 1811-12 Chronicled earthquakes 1816
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New Madrid Earthquakes Eliza Bryan account – ‘Violent shocks …’ – ‘Continuous agitation …’ – ‘Sand... from fissures’ – ‘Twenty foot waves …’ Evidence still visible today
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New Madrid Earthquakes River recedes from bank 15- to 20-foot waves ‘Waters gathered like a mountain …’ Boats torn from moorings ‘Water took groves of cottonwood trees’ Flooded tributary ¼-mile
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New Madrid Earthquakes ‘Retrograde current’ – Fault uplifted land surface downstream – Natural dam – Backflow created Reelfoot Lake – Channel soon reclaimed Evidence still visible today
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New Madrid Earthquakes Probably hundreds died, mostly on the river African and Native Americans not counted Insurance records (!) show losses of lives and insured cargoes
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Evidence Still Visible Today Sandblows
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Evidence Still Visible Today Reelfoot Lake Northwest Tennessee Sunklands
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New Madrid Earthquakes Felt area larger than same-size California earthquakes – Rock here is different! Aftershocks for years What is odd about this map?
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USGS Products Detailed hazard maps – Memphis, Tenn. – Evansville, Ind. – St. Louis, Mo. Groundshaking Liquefaction Not site-specific!
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US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CENTRAL US EARTHQUAKE PROGRAM Phyllis Steckel, RG Earthquake Insight LLC Washington, Mo. In cooperation with the
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