Anticipating Earthquakes 138
dnahelix writes "Science @ NASA reports 'High above Earth where seismic waves never reach, satellites may be able to detect earthquakes--before they strike.'"
Whoever dies with the most toys wins.
Whoah man... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Whoah man... (Score:2)
Yeah... but after dropping all that acid, I find myself anticipating earthquakes like, ALL THE TIME, man...
It wouldn't be so bad if I didn't live in Michigan.
Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:5, Funny)
A Horny dog is not necessarily predicting an earthquake
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:4, Funny)
Better stick with satellites and computers for longer warning time, much less hassle.
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:1)
AFAIK, they've developed wireless interconnection millennia ago;)
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:1)
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:4, Informative)
Interestingly, a 1975 earthquake in China was successfully predicted [drgeorgepc.com] due in large part to strange animal behavior. A large number of lives were saved.
Needless to say, this is an extreme exception to the rule, and is about as reliable as grandma's old bones are at predicting the weather.
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:4, Interesting)
". .
I disagree. Dogs can hear much lower frequency sounds than humans and so would have a significant advantage at detecting imminent earthquakes. Farm animals (such as detected the China quake) can be readily shown to be aware of chanegs in a wide variety of situations: Earth's magnetic field fluctuations, gravitational disturbances, minute environmental chemical changes. I was at an air force base where the CO assigned men to watch the nearby reindeer herd. Their behaviour detected (and warned the base) of several natural and unnatural phenomenon. Among them being approaching weather fronts, seismic events and approaching Soviet aircraft and submarines. They were not as good as radar but more accurate at telling changes from routines.
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:3, Insightful)
Hence, they are as reliable as grandma's old bones are at predicting the weather.
If that was not true, we would have earthquake prediction by animals on a regular basis (which we do not have).
Maybe if we could learn the ways of Dr. Dolittle and talk with them we would be able to do better in this area. But I'm not holding my breath.
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:2)
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:1)
Why can't we develop a device that detects these as well ? So we can get a more reliable warning of an incoming quake.
Or is it being developed alr
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:2)
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, the Chinese are now downplaying predicting earthquakes after 30 false alarms. See Is the reliable prediction of individual earthquakes a realistic scientific goal? [nature.com]
I saw a TV show about fringe-scientific earthq
Re:Satellites? Why in my day we used dogs! (Score:1)
Then what? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Then what? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Then what? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Then what? (Score:1)
nature is not the medical profession, we can not prevent the earth from doing its thing.
Re:Then what? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Then what? (Score:2)
With prediction of seismic and volcanic events (Mammoth Mountain anyone?) as bad as it is, you would have a large number of warnings, followed by nothing.
Would you like to be the USGS spokesman who had to admit they had got it wrong - again? No, me neither.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:Then what? (Score:1)
If the warning period was on the order of days, there'd be a web page for Emergency Services/Disaster Assistance coordinators to check, and it'd be their responsibil
Re:Then what? (Score:2)
Any technology that helps prevent large scale loss of life has to be good. Of course, there will always be the dumbasses who stay put no matter what!
Re:Then what? (Score:5, Insightful)
The questions have been solved. Emergency managers on the US east and gulf coasts (and, I assume, their counterparts in other nations affected by tropical cyclones) have plenty of experience running evacuations without causing the collapse of civilization.
This of course assumes several days notice. If only hours or minutes are available, a tornado siren approach [slashdot.org] would be more effective.
Re:Then what? (Score:1)
Re:Then what? (Score:1)
Weather (Score:5, Funny)
Actually weather prediction is a good model (Score:3, Interesting)
Californians are very blazee, and would ignore predictions of low probability. Scientists are happy if they can beat random probablity, which is about 1 in 20,000 of a destructive quake happening on a given day in Los Angeles. This is a far cry from a 1 in
Why would we want to do this? (Score:1, Insightful)
Advanced humans (Americans, etc.) need to stop messing with Mother Nature and just let things run their course.
Why does Science always have to rear its ugly head? Just let things be.
It's only a matter of time... (Score:4, Funny)
high above the internet (Score:4, Funny)
What about the Panic? (Score:3, Interesting)
Dental Plan! (Score:1)
Re:What about the Panic? (Score:2)
sure, much better to be killed in your beds by falling masonry. By the same logic we shouldn't have hurricane warnings, flood warnings, warnings of imminent terrorist attacks...you've been watching too many movies.
And why this assumption that criminals are any less solicitous about their own safety than other people? How many housebreakers are going to break into a house knowing that it's probably going to collapse on top of them, that they'll probably have nowhere to store the stuff they've stolen, and th
Re:What about the Panic? (Score:3, Informative)
maybe.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:maybe.. (Score:2)
I can already do that. It's called The Mysterious Future. Perhaps you don't subscribe?
Can just see it now... (Score:1, Funny)
"Yes Captain... back in the late 20th century spanning to the early 21st century, a web news site called Slashdot...."
"Get to the point Data..."
"Yes Captain... if we overload the Borg's systems with excessively massive activity... it might, in theory, cause their servers to melt into charred silicon...as the venacular went."
Easy- get a cow! (Score:1, Funny)
Note that there might be some practical considerations having a cow in, say, L.A.
Re:Easy- get a cow! (Score:2)
Just like predicting Scotsmen using sheep!
Re:Easy- get a cow! (Score:2)
Or...wait for the earthquake that you couldn't predict to count the eggs after it hatches them for you...
Evacuation Chaos? (Score:1)
So suppose you get a day's advance warning of an earthquake hitting a major city, and put a warning out? Do people get into leave the city in a calm and orderly fashion or perhaps get to some sort of earthquake shelter? Or does half the populace jam the roads, trying to take every last one of their belongings with them as flee the city, while the other
Re:Evacuation Chaos? (Score:3, Interesting)
The Japanese system envisages, ultimately, being able to give a few minu
Re:Evacuation Chaos? (Score:2, Funny)
Good point - I was getting earthquakes confused with Godzilla attacks. Though while *you* may know that, I suspect a great proportion Joe Public would still want to get out of the city completely, which could cause gridlock, people stuck in their cars when the quake strikes, etc.
Re:Evacuation Chaos? (Score:1)
A) Live in an earthquake zone.
B) Panic at first warning, and flee the city
C) Get stuck on a bridge trying to escape.
D) Die because the bridge fell into the ocean when the earthquake hit
I have no sympathy for you. You were WARNED for cryssakes...
Re:Evacuation Chaos? (Score:1)
Major quake within the next 30 years? (Score:2, Insightful)
Any resident of California could tell you that... :)
I guess with the current state of affairs, any progress would be good
Makes me think, though. Ability to detect variations of 1mm over the course of a year? How do they account for, say, a satellite drifting slightly (gravity, solar wind, whatever)? How do the
or... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:or... (Score:2, Funny)
Using sheep bladders to predict earthquakes... why I never heard so much nonsense before in my life! Just goes to show how this generation doesn't know anything...
Mmmmm.....Critical Crustal Stress (Score:2)
Critical Crustal Stresses? Did that make anyone else laugh out loud? "Today's CCS Index has been brought to you by your good friends at Entenmann's. Experiencing Critical Crustal Stress? Satisfy your craving with Entenmann's Ultimate Crumb Cake, available now at your neighborhood supermarket."
Volcanos (Score:2)
Re:Volcanos (Score:5, Informative)
A good number of volcanoes - such as those on Hawaii, are fitted with tiltmeters and laser-ranging reflectors.
As magma moves up towards the surface, some volcanoes start to 'inflate', bulging outwards. By measuring changes in tilt, and the geometry of the mountain, vulcanologists can get some warning of the changes under the mountain.
They usually combine this with seismic evidence (that moving magma creates swarms of tiny 'quakes), changes in gas production and the like to try and predict eruptions.
However, volcanoes are just as unpredictable. The USGS made a series of predictions about the Long Valley Caldera in Eastern California. It is an ENORMOUS crater which is underlain by an active magma chamber. The last volcanic activity in the region was about 400 years ago, and it is likely to continue into the future. Slap bang in the middle of Long Valley is the Mammoth Mountain ski resort, built around a dormant volcano.
In the early 1980s, the area around Mammoth Mountain began to bulge, molten rock was being forced upwards, there were swarms of 'quakes, trees began dying as CO2 bubbled up from underground. The USGS cautiously announced that they expected Mammoth Mountain to become active in the near future.
It didn't. The area remains highly active, but doomsday was put off for now.
BTW. if you ever get a chance to go to Mammoth Mountain, Long Valley and the Inyo Craters, do take it - the landscape is simply awe-inspiring.
Another example is Pozzuoli, which lies West of Naples in an area known as the Phlaegrean Fields. This is another colossal caldera with an active magma chamber. The last eruption was in 1538 when a new mountain (called Monte Nuovo somewhat unoriginally) was formed, the crater of Solfatara is still somewhat active, disgorging water and sulphurous fumes.
Pozzuoli is in the the middle of the Fields, a nice seaside town with some Roman ruins. However, during the 1970s, the area began to be shaken by hundreds of 'quakes a day. Even more worryingly, the area began to bulge upwards, sometimes by a centimetre a day! The Italian government ordered the evacuation of the entire city for several years, fearing another massive eruption. Eventually, the bulge subsided, the 'quakes faded and the people went back. But millions had been spent and enormous social dislocation caused.
It's quiet there at the moment, so everyone is looking East, over Naples to Vesuvius, which has been suspiciously quiet for far too long now.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:Volcanos (Score:1)
Yes, but is it a`a-inspiring?
Re:Volcanos (Score:2)
OUCH!
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:Volcanos (Score:1)
BTW, that's exactly what I said when I sprained my ankle hiking on it during a field excursion. A mile and a half from the damn truck. Ah, my old ig-pet days...
Re:Volcanos (Score:2)
Nasty, almost as nasty as me slipping on an obsidian flow near Mono Lake. Yep, that stuff sure is sharp.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:Volcanos (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Volcanos (Score:1)
Before They Strike? (Score:4, Funny)
This is a follow up to a previous program that was predicting them after they struck. Just last year they managed to predict the 1906 San Francisco Quake with amazing accuracy, and results like that are money in the bank for further research.
"Post-dictions" (Score:2)
Award for Unfortunate Choice of Acronym goes too.. (Score:2, Insightful)
If I want money from Congress to deploy a constellation of satellites to detect earthquakes, would calling it GESS be my first choice?
Prediction window needs work (Score:2)
Mayor Of Los Angeles: Hello?
Voice On Phone: This is NASA! You're about to have-
(Five minutes of rumbling, cracking and breaking glass and then silence).
Re:Prediction window needs work (Score:1, Funny)
(Five minutes of rumbling, cracking and breaking glass and then silence).
Chronic flatulence, apparently.
Watching the stress build... (Score:4, Informative)
The "60% chance of earthquakes in the next two days" portion of the prediction seems to rely on some piezo electric effect detected via magnetometers and thermal imaging. This has been speculated about for at least a couple of decades now, but I guess the signal to noise ratio is pretty bad since they haven't declared success yet. Maybe QuakeSat, mentioned at the end of the article, will provide enough comprehensive data to make some useful predictions. Predicting 12 out of the last 3 earthquakes isn't going to win you any friends!
Re:Watching the stress build... (Score:1)
Traditional methods involved in-situ gauges and periodic levelling and surveying lines. But these only provide measurements at a few points or along a few lines. Converting this into a picture of the strain field over an area is quite fraught. The survey lines are also quite expensive to do right (satellites are expensive too, but usually they are up there for more than one reason) but most importan
Fiction First (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Fiction First (Score:1)
Re:Fiction First (Score:1)
Re:Fiction First (Score:1)
Re:Fiction First (Score:1)
There's actually a sequel - the Schroedinger's Cat trilogy, set in a variety of alternate universes, each one more confusing than the last. I actually preferred it to the original, but wouldn't recommend it if you get hug up on things like "plot" and "structure".
Glad to be of help.
How Will You Warn The Public? (Score:3, Insightful)
If the earthquake occurs, you're a hero; you saved the lives of hundreds if not thousands. If the earthquake doesn't, or is much smaller than predicted, you caused lots of people to die for no apparent reason, and you've lessened the public?s readiness to believe you the next time you make an earthquake prediction like this.
This is nothing like trying to evacuate the shoreline of a major city for an approaching hurricane, because when those evacuations are issued they are in fact for the shoreline. You would be, in theory, proposing the evacuation of an entire metropolis, which no city in this country, or the world for that matter, has the proper infrastructure to handle such an evacuation unless you gave a lead time of a week or so.
Re:How Will You Warn The Public? (Score:1)
Re:How Will You Warn The Public? (Score:2)
I ask since the Atlantic Seaboard does have quite severe earthquakes from time-to-time. In 1755 there was a submarine 'quake about 270km off of Cape Anne, Massachusetts. Estimates put it at Richter 6 to 6.5. It caused massive damage to Boston.
Then in 1886 there was big 'quake centred near Richmond, Virginia. Estimated at Richter 6.6 it levelled most of the city.
And the East was heavily shaken by the trio of awe-inspiring New Madrid 'quakes of 1811-1812. Each was between
Re:How Will You Warn The Public? (Score:1)
Re:How Will You Warn The Public? (Score:2)
Which of course means you have longer to live so that you can wait for the next one.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Mexico City has a working alarm system (Score:3, Informative)
Extra-terrestrial seismology? (Score:3, Interesting)
Only two weeks ago my current boss invited me to accompany him to an evening lecture... on solar seismology! Turns out the guy is not just a paper pusher but actually has some serious qualifications in nuclear physics (of the solar, not bomb, sort - albeit a fine line between). Gave me a fascinating insight into more of the complexities of our sun, how its quakes make ours seem like mere trembles and its potential effects on us.
Unfortunately, coming to Oz from an eastern european country meant he had little opportunity to use those skills, so now he's a frustrated project manager - there ain't no justice, eh?
Easier to measure sun-quakes (Score:2)
Solar data is "cleaner" and more complete than earth measurements. They dont have soil-coupling problems, nor man-made noise interference. The mathematics of solar seismic waves is the same as earth seismic
Piezoelectricity? (Score:1)
Re:Piezoelectricity? (Score:1)
Most import prediction: construction standards (Score:4, Insightful)
I've been in three near M7 quakes in California and I can testify how psychologically traumatic a sudden quake is. Short term prediction would be comforting. It would also save some lives in large buildings like schools and stadiums (even though the 1989 San Francisco quake happended during a Wolrd Series baseball game without fatallity). And in reving up rescue crews.
Re:Most import prediction: construction standards (Score:2, Insightful)
Some people might look t
Re:Most import prediction: construction standards (Score:1)
The problem of isolated quake precursors (Score:3, Informative)
Good book on quake hazards (Score:3, Informative)
If you are interested in knowing more about earthquake hazards, but you're not a seismologist, check out Earthshaking Science [amazon.com] by Susan Hough. She works for the U.S. Geological Survey. She first discusses the basics of determining earthquake hazard, then discusses the currently estimated hazard in various regions in the United States. She's not optimisitic about specific earthquake prediction, but she thinks that we can improve our estimates of longer-term hazards. These estimates are critical for guiding hazard-mitigation efforts (building codes, for example).
Before posting 'What about public panic?'... (Score:2)
Here's a quote from the article...
Easy to prove if the system works (Score:1)
They can prove if the system works (or not) in no time. The interesting is how the organization of evacuations and prepareness can be trickled down to people. Truth to be told, many SoCal residents still do not know that to do when an earthquake hits. Many ho
Re:California centric (Score:1)
Re:California centric (Score:3, Interesting)
-uso.
Re:California centric (Score:2)
I'd be tempted to declare you a troll, actually ;)
Errr...quakes affect the east coast, too (Score:4, Interesting)
It's just not as densely populated as California.
Re:California centric (Score:5, Interesting)
Check out this image of damage done by similar quakes: http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/prepare/factsheets/NewMa
Re:California centric (Score:5, Insightful)
You are absolutely correct. The problem is that this article is coming from NASA, and last I checked, NASA is a US government agency. So, we'll be using our resources and spending our money to develop a technology that we'll probably be nice enough to let the rest of the world use. So read about the San Andreas fault and say thank you.
Re:morons anticipating unprecedented changes (Score:1)
It can detect zombies as well? Cool. I guess now we know what George Romero's been doing since he wrapped on 'Bruiser'.
Re:Nobody joined the last game (Score:1)
Re:Nobody joined the last game (Score:1)
Re:Nobody joined the last game (Score:1)
Re:Nobody joined the last game (Score:1)
Re:Playing with Nature (Score:1)