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The Earthquake is Inevitable: The Disaster is Not. U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey. Earthquake Organizations. U.S. Geological Survey Federal agency in Department of Interior Caltech Seismological Laboratory Private university Southern California Earthquake Center
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The Earthquake is Inevitable:The Disaster is Not U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey
Earthquake Organizations • U.S. Geological Survey • Federal agency in Department of Interior • Caltech Seismological Laboratory • Private university • Southern California Earthquake Center • Consortium of universities & USGS • California Geological Survey • State agency in Department of Conservation • Office of Emergency Services • State agency in Homeland Security
Today’s speakers • Lucy Jones, USGS • Scientist-in-charge for southern California • Gary Fuis, USGS • Project chief, Southern California Earthquake Hazards • Egill Hauksson, Caltech • Senior Research Associate • Ken Hudnut, USGS • Project chief, Southern California Earthquake Hazards • Tom Jordan, SCEC • Director, Southern California Earthquake Center
The Earthquake is Inevitable:The Disaster is Not U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey
What is an Earthquake? • Sudden slip of one block of rock across another • Produces shaking as one of its effects • The shaking is what you feel
Magnitude • Empirical and arbitrary • Defined from ground velocity • Each unit means 32 times more energy M5 M6 M7
Moment Magnitude • Depends on: • Fault area • Amount of slip • Each unit means 32 times more energy M5 M6 M7
Every point on the rupture surface releases energy Rupture Surface Hypocenter Faultplane A bigger fault means a bigger earthquake Fault Epi- center Hypo-center
Shaking = damage potential ShakeMap M4.8 Yorba Linda September 2002
What Controls the Level of Shaking? • Magnitude • More energy released
What Controls the Level of Shaking? • Magnitude • More energy released • Distance • Shaking decays with distance
Hector Mine October 16, 1999 M7.1 Northridge January 17, 1994 M6.7
What Controls the Level of Shaking? • Magnitude • More energy released • Distance • Shaking decays with distance • Local soils • amplify the shaking
Undamaged Buildings on the fault 1906 San Francisco
Damage at Great Distance The Bay Bridge 1989 Loma Prieta The Marina District
Big earthquakes on big faults • M7.9 Denali, Alaska • November 3, 2002 • 200+ mile long fault
Magnitude = Time • Earthquakes start at hypocenter • The rupture moves over a surface • Duration of earthquake depends on magnitude
Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length Total Slip in the M7.3 Landers Earthquake
Surface of the earth Depth e into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length Slip on an earthquake fault: Start
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 2.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 4.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 6.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 8.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 10.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 12.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 14.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 16.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 18.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 20.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 22.0 Surface of the earth Depth into the earth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
Slip on an earthquake fault: Second 24.0 Surface of the earth Depth Distance along the fault plane, 100 km (60 miles) total length
The Risk in Southern California • 300+ faults • One M≥6.7 event per 7 years
The Big Bend Los Angeles has the greatest risk in the United States
The bottom line: Earthquakes happen National hazards map Courtesy of California Geological Survey & U. S. Geological Survey
Scenario ShakeMap for M 7.4 Southern San Andreas Rupture Courtesy of Ned Field, USGS, Pasadena