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Midwest Earthquake Hazard Downplayed

swellconvivialguy writes "Next year marks the bicentennial of the 1811-12 New Madrid earthquakes, with earthquake drills and disaster tourism events planned across the Midwest, including the Great Central US ShakeOut. But despite the fact that Earthquake Hazard Maps equate the New Madrid seismic zone with California, geologist Seth Stein says new science (especially GPS data) tells us that the hazard has been significantly overestimated, and that we should not spend billions on earthquake preparations in the Midwest."

26 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. So Confused on the GPS Data and Logic by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When we look at faults around the world, we see them storing up that energy. So when we first put markers in the ground and measured the position of the Midwestern fault lines we were surprised that we didn’t see any motion at New Madrid. We concluded that there’s no sign that a big earthquake is on the way.

    I'm not a geologist so I'm very confused, if something is 'storing up energy' how does moving around equate to that? I mean, if the moving of the ground in violent ways is the releasing of that 'stored energy' then how is small movements indications that it's storing up energy? I would assume that the worse earthquake areas are those when there's a lot of movement going on deep underground but nothing on the surface releasing that energy until a very devastating movement.

    So from the Wikipedia article:

    The lack of apparent land movement along the New Madrid fault system has long puzzled scientists. In 2009 two studies based on eight years of GPS measurements indicated that the faults were moving at no more than 0.2 millimetres (0.0079 in) a year. This contrasts to the rate of slippage on the San Andreas Fault which averages up to 37 millimetres (1.5 in) a year across California.

    Can somebody who knows a lot about this stuff explain to me why we are so sure that a lack of movement in GPS measurements indicate no potential earthquake? My intuition would guess that no movement is not a good indicator either way unless we've figured out how to drive GPS receivers down into the faults themselves and retrieve that information. I think they're just ground stations that are taking these GPS measurements, right?

    What about the northern earthquakes? Do GPS stations up there report tiny movements in the crusts leading up to those earthquakes? I'm just curious if it's possible that you're dealing with different kinds of faults when comparing the San Andreas fault line versus the Ramapo fault line versus the New Madrid fault line.

    What we’re learning is that faults switch on and off. They will be active for a thousand years or so, and then inactive for several thousand years. And then other faults may become active. From a scientific standpoint, that’s the really exciting thing we’ve learned from New Madrid. It has been the key to the door that opened up a whole new understanding about how faults inside continents work.

    This sounds, at best, questionable or highly fitted to very recent events that we've had the privilege to watch. It's difficult to look over long swaths of time historically when our precision instruments for measuring are a very recent thing compared to the age of the crust. I'm not arguing for the spending of billions in the mid-west but I'm not sold on a single expert's opinion, is this consensus in the geological community?

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:So Confused on the GPS Data and Logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      if something is 'storing up energy' how does moving around equate to that? I mean, if the moving of the ground in violent ways is the releasing of that 'stored energy' then how is small movements indications that it's storing up energy?

      I am not a geologist either, but if I hold one end of a rubber band still and move the other in one direction, it stores up energy. Releasing the rubber band releases that stored energy by moving in the other direction in a violent (and possibly painful) way.

    2. Re:So Confused on the GPS Data and Logic by joebagodonuts · · Score: 4, Informative

      When we look at faults around the world, we see them storing up that energy. So when we first put markers in the ground and measured the position of the Midwestern fault lines we were surprised that we didn’t see any motion at New Madrid. We concluded that there’s no sign that a big earthquake is on the way.

      I'm not a geologist so I'm very confused, if something is 'storing up energy' how does moving around equate to that? I mean, if the moving of the ground in violent ways is the releasing of that 'stored energy' then how is small movements indications that it's storing up energy? I would assume that the worse earthquake areas are those when there's a lot of movement going on deep underground but nothing on the surface releasing that energy until a very devastating movement.

      Your answer is in the previous paragraph in the article:

      "It lets us see the ground storing up that energy and deforming ".

      --
      "Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
    3. Re:So Confused on the GPS Data and Logic by rrossman2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In my mind I'd see it more like trying to remove a pressed wheel bearing. For example I have an OTC Hub Tamer Elite that has a C shaped part you put between the knuckle and the hub/rotor assembly, and then a J shaped piece that goes off of the C and ends up on the other side of the knuckle aligned with the hole in the wheel bearing. You put a long high strength bolt down the middle of the wheel bearing and into a disc, and then put a nut on. You hold the nut, and use an impact to drive the bolt. The bolt can't move inward any because of the J part, so the nut forces the disc to push the hub and/or wheel bearing out. Sometimes on a really stuck wheel bearing, the impact is giving all it's got but nothing is moving, and you're now maxing out what the 500 lb/ft impact can do. The movements near the end of tightening it as far as it can go are really, really small, but man there's a lot of pressure on the nut, bolt, and bearing. In that situation, you just take a hammer and smack the J once, and it that bearing comes flying out, and I mean flying. So in *my* mind, a lot of movement would mean there's possibly not as much pressure between the two, which is allowing it to move faster, where as the slower movement would possibly mean increased pressure and that's why the movement is so small.

      Either way I'm not a geologist or a seismologist or whatever, so what do I know :)

    4. Re:So Confused on the GPS Data and Logic by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Couldn't a complete lack of movement indicate the area is tightly locked up and it is going to break even more violently?

      I thought the historical record showed periodic massive earthquakes every few hundred years. I'd put that over lack of ground movement.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    5. Re:So Confused on the GPS Data and Logic by milkmage · · Score: 2, Informative

      the difference between and earthquake, and not is how QUICKLY the energy is released.

      think of it this way.. take X amount of energy and bend a piece of wood over 100 years. take that same amount of energy and apply it in 10 seconds. Over a hundred years, you'll end up with a bent piece of wood.. in 10 seconds, you get a snapped piece of wood. tectonic movement is slow bending, earthquakes are the snap. you don't notice a shift of an inch over 20 years, but in an earthquake, it's shifting FEET in SECONDS.. slow movement (release of energy) is not nearly as devastating or violent as a quick release.

      the Hayward fault runs right though CAL Berkeley Stadium. every so often, over the course of years, there's a measurable movement (one side vs. the other)..
      see the pics. before you click on the link.. all that movement happened over ~hundred years (the stadium was built in 1922-23)

      http://seismo.berkeley.edu/hayward/ucb_campus.html

      if there was a major quake on that fault.. row 5 on one side of the fault would match row 6 on the other.

      we all know the Bay Area is a hotbed of earthquake activitity because of sublte signs like the last 2 pics on the link.. apparently, there was no such "creep" on the Midwestern Fault - so they weren't expecting an earthquake.

  2. Fortunately, by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Tectonic plate movement is exceedly slow, and rarely remembers anniversaries.

    --
    Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
  3. anniversaries are forever... by digitaldc · · Score: 4, Funny

    But how could it forget? It was our diamond in raw form anniversary!

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  4. Just in time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...for the release of cataclysm

  5. Earthquakes? In Minnesota? by girlintraining · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Money would be better spent making a few places secure for winter time emergencies. Unlike California, if we're without power or housing, we die.

    --
    #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
  6. New Madrid Earthquake Disaster Plan by digitaldc · · Score: 3, Funny

    Step 1: Run outside and watch for falling corn kernels and cotton balls

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  7. congratulations by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Funny

    you've invented an acronym that bothers me more than IANAL

    My mind always reads that as "I anal", or in "I'm anal", Which makes sense if you're a lawyer meaning anal in the psychological sense, but it has certain sexual overtones as well that I don't want to think about on a website mostly populated by men.

    Now you've invented an acronym for saying you're not a seismologist, IANAS, and my brain processes it as "I anus" or "I'm an anus."

    Never mind why you have low self esteem: basically I just want to read about earthquakes and legal issues without thinking about so much goddamn anal and anuses.

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:congratulations by robot256 · · Score: 2
  8. Re:bold vs. coward by somaTh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm confused. Are we talking about midwest earthquakes or terrorist plots?

    --
    Nostalgia isn't what it used to be.
  9. No, Mostly Missouri by eldavojohn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Money would be better spent making a few places secure for winter time emergencies. Unlike California, if we're without power or housing, we die.

    If you look at the map, you'll see that the New Madrid fault line is mostly in Missouri and will affect several states further south. It won't even touch Minnesota. Serious earthquakes are pretty rare, even historically in Minnesota.

    I don't know what the winters are like in Missouri and I don't know if many people die from them down there. The threats from poor driving on the road are probably their biggest problems and I don't know if any amount of money will fix that sort of behavior. I grew up near Buffalo Ridge in Minnesota and there were a couple of earthquakes I remember but they didn't leave any visible damage. But yeah there were several ice storms and snowstorms that left us snowbound ... my mom would fill the bathtub full of potable water in case the pipes froze to our well. We had a fireplace as our only heat until I was fifteen when we got a gas heater. Yes, I woke up some mornings to see my breath had frozen to frost on my pillow in front of my face. And there were more than a few nights when I opt to sleep next to the fireplace rather than my bed which seemed to be the furthest away in the house.

    Knowing how to survive a bad winter or a hot summer in Minnesota is important but if you look at the area these earthquakes could affect, the area is staggering. I don't know if it would hit quite the population that the San Andreas could but you're talking about a potential large area without utilities, increased lawlessness and a logistical nightmare for support/rescue. It might be worth risking billions to inform people of how to prepare and handle this sort of disaster. I guess that's up to the geologists and seismologists to recommend though.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:No, Mostly Missouri by compro01 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The only possibility I can think of that's even remotely like that is wholesale destruction of grain elevators.

      How about wholesale destruction of railroad tracks? A strong earthquake will do amusing things to the rails.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    2. Re:No, Mostly Missouri by vlm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Inputs : Agribusiness works on diesel, damaged pipelines, etc. No fuel / seed / fertilizer / bug spray adds up to big problems.

      Scale : One tipped over combine harvester is no big deal for the village's single tow truck and the villages single mechanic, and the regional tractor distributor probably has "a" spare part in stock. And his neighbor is probably friendly and OK. On the other hand, when ALL the harvesters / tractors in one area tip over or are crushed by collapsed barns etc, then we all have a big problem.

      Time : Agriculture is pretty time sensitive, you can't just decide to plant or harvest next month on a whim. General mayhem could very severely impact crop yields simply by giving the survivors something more urgent to do at just the wrong time. Many crops only survive by irrigation, which is great if you have either electricity or diesel, not so great if the supply chain is interrupted for a couple days.

      Output : No star trek transporters. Need working railroads, which means working phone lines and working electrical grid and no trees across the (twisted?) rails. Or you can do the diesel truck thing, which also requires truck driver infrastructure like staffed and full gas stations. The river will continue to work, assuming you can reach it.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  10. Re:bold vs. coward by robot256 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The terrorists are plotting an earthquake! Everybody panic!

  11. Re:It's a trap! by s122604 · · Score: 2, Funny

    "fly over" country???

    Everybody knows the proper term for this area is "Real America"
    Thank God we have Sarah Palin to protect us from you fake Americans...

  12. New Madrid is totally different from Ca faults by HunterA3 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The New Madrid fault is totally different from the faults in California. The earth in and around the New Madrid fault lines are covered with millions of years of river silt, clay, and other soft strata. It is several miles underground making observation of its activity difficult at best. The most observable activity is the sand boils. They usually indicate pressure pushing up to the surface. The faults in California are within harder, drier strata, making them much easier to see, even with the naked eye. The plates which make up the faults in CA also move with greater frequency causing the strata around them to be splintered with spiderweb cracking, making them easier to move when pressure builds up. The New Madrid fault doesn't move much because it is not along a significant induction/subduction area between plates like those in CA (though the plates on the coast are not actually diving under one another but rather rubbing against each other). This is why the last major quake at New Madrid was so large. There's very little movement to reduce the strain.

    1. Re:New Madrid is totally different from Ca faults by Me!+Me!+42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes. It's surprising that he seems to gloss over this fact (and the physical evidence of many earlier major earthquakes in the area.) I assume the article does not present his argument well. As a geology grad and Illinoian who has experienced tremors in southern Illinois first hand, I will not be one to dismiss the dangers of the New Madrid fault anytime soon. Just two years ago I had pots in my kitchen cabinets rattle from a tremor in the area, and I live 350 miles away, near Chicago. I think his view (as presented) is definitely in the minority among seismologists.

      --
      -- My apologies if the above facts contain any opinions, or vice versa! --
  13. Dark magic by gmuslera · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That comment from the geologist looks like the perfect way to summon the Murphy undergod. May be it wouldnt was to happen anything bad before, but now the resulting megaquake will even trigger the Yellowstone supervolcano.

  14. "inside-plate" earthquakes difficult to assess by peter303 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The theory of plate tectonics easily explains the earthquakes at the boundaries of tectonic plates due to the differential grinding motions of these plates. New Madrid is one of the 10%-15% of earthquakes that does not happen a current plate boundary, so its cause is less clear. There are motions of sub-blocks inside a plate. But these are typically an order of magnitude less that at established plate boundaries. So it may take millennia to build the same kinds of strains (20+ feet) it only takes centuries in a place like California. Geophysicists are divided by the amount of strain at New Madrid. Dr. Stein's group only sees a small amount in GPS data. Others see a lot more. The data has noise. Its quality depends on the experimental setup. The more stations you record, the more complexity you see.

    The US government and university scientists are spending a lot of money and effort to understand the New Madrid area. It more a lack of understanding of intra-plate earthquakes than the amount of money spent. In this era of "no risk is too small" political correctness (e.g. TSA) perhaps no government authority is willing to demote The New Madrid risk as Dr. Stein claims.

    (I was a classmate of Dr. Steins at MIT decades ago,)

  15. Don't you watch disaster movies? by Comboman · · Score: 4, Funny

    Geologist Seth Stein says new science tells us that the hazard has been significantly overestimated, and that we should not spend billions on earthquake preparations in the Midwest.

    I hate to break it to you Seth, but in every disaster movie I've ever seen, the guy who dies first (usually in an ironic way) is the scientist who says there's no danger and we don't need to prepare.

    --
    Support Right To Repair Legislation.
  16. Re:It's a trap! by nomadic · · Score: 2, Funny

    will render "Middle America" unlivable

    It's livable now?

  17. Seismologist, here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seismologist (in training -- Ph.D. student), here.

    The scientific and engineering consensus is that there is an earthquake hazard in the central US. New Madrid had three massive events at around ~M8.0 200 years ago, a dozens of M6.0 events, and there is paleontological evidence showing that these earthquakes have occurred every few hundred years dating back quite some time. The USGS gives the New Madrid seismic zone a 25-40% chance to have a M6.0 or larger earthquake in the next 50 years. I might note that seismic waves in this area travel significantly farther due to the older, less smashed-up ground underneath this region of the country. Additionally, the New Madrid seismic zone is filled with up to 1km of thick sediment. How, exactly, seismic waves propagate through thick sediment is still undergoing much study, but we do know that they focus earthquake energy, and studies in Taipei have shown that sharp velocity gradients in the sediment can double the peak ground acceleration of an earthquake at the surface.

    Seth Stein and a few others in the GPS area look at surface measurements as the only sign for strain to build up causing an earthquake. This works with very pretty models of earthquakes, like near San Andreas and Eric Calais' famous "Haiti prediction" (he looked at the strain rates, calculated how much strain had built up since the last earthquake, and stated that if an earthquake were to happen soon, it'd be ~M6.8 or so), but it breaks down significantly for inter-continental seismic zones. The New Madrid seismic zone is one of those zones, and it is poorly understood. However, it doesn't take brain-busting thinking to entertain the idea that strain rate at the surface doesn't mean that nothing is happening at the subsurface, and, in fact, the New Madrid seismic zone has very frequent small magnitude earthquakes every day.

    The scientific consensus is that the New Madrid seismic zone presents a serious seismic hazard based on tons of historical evidence and current seismological research. Seth Stein is the devil's advocate to that view and frequently and very public tells the world that there will never, ever be another big earthquake in New Madrid, ever. He is in the minority.

    I might note that seismic hazard assessment for Wenchuan, China, was rated very highly in the 1950s due to historic evidence of horrible earthquakes in that area. Since the 1950s, the Chinese seismic hazard map has been revised several times and, due to very very slow strain rates measured by GPS, Wenchuan's risk of a catastrophic earthquake was downgraded to basically negligible. In 2008, however, we all saw that massive M7.9 that struck and killed so many people in this area where strain rates were "too small for a large earthquake."

    I also might note that physicists at USGS have used the very same data that Seth Stein collected and used, and when they subtracted out the average movement of the North American continent, they found strain rates in the central US that were very high, more than enough to create a catastrophic earthquake. There is more than one way to interpret Stein's data.