Media Advisory: 25 Years Later: Santa Cruz after the Loma Prieta Earthquake plus 1 more

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Title: USGS Newsroom

Media Advisory: 25 Years Later: Santa Cruz after the Loma Prieta Earthquake plus 1 more

Link to USGS Newsroom

Media Advisory: 25 Years Later: Santa Cruz after the Loma Prieta Earthquake

Posted: 14 Oct 2014 01:46 PM PDT

Summary: The Downtown Association of Santa Cruz will host a 25th anniversary commemoration of the Loma Prieta Earthquake

Contact Information:

Jemile Erdem ( Phone: 650-346-4714 ); Leslie  Gordon ( Phone: 650-329-4006 );




SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — The Downtown Association of Santa Cruz will host a 25th anniversary commemoration of the Loma Prieta Earthquake. Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey and the University of California, Santa Cruz, will join downtown merchants, past and present city officials, the American Red Cross and others to look back at the tragedy of 1989, how the community recovered and rebuilt itself, what scientists and communities have learned since then, and how Santa Cruz is prepared to be more resilient in the next big earthquake. 

Speakers will address what happened during the earthquake, the scientific setting, the recovery and rebuilding of the Santa Cruz downtown area since 1989, the ongoing earthquake hazard that California still faces, and how to be prepared for future earthquakes.

Who:

Chip, Santa Cruz Downtown Association, Executive Director
Don Lane, Vice Mayor, City of Santa Cruz
Susan Schwartz, UC Santa Cruz, Professor of Seismology
Dick Wilson, former Santa Cruz City Manager
Neal Coonerty, former Mayor, County Supervisor, and business owner
Tom Brocher, USGS Earthquake Science Center Director
Ginaia Kelly, American Red Cross, Santa Cruz County Chapter CEO

What:

A commemoration, a look back, and a look forward to Santa Cruz’s earthquake resiliency.

When:

Friday, October 17, 2014, 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. PDT

Where:  

Memorial Plaza
Corner of Front Street and Pacific Avenue
Santa Cruz, California

Seismometers to Measure DC Shaking

Posted: 14 Oct 2014 08:00 AM PDT

Summary: Thirty seismometers are being installed in the Nation’s capital this winter to monitor ground tremors to better estimate the intensity of ground shaking that can be expected during future earthquakes in the area

USGS and Virginia Tech Begin Installations in November

Contact Information:

Thomas  Pratt ( Phone: 206-919-8773 ); Guney  Olgun ( Phone: 540-231-2036 ); Hannah  Hamilton ( Phone: 703-314-1601 );




WASHINGTON, D.C. – Thirty seismometers are being installed in the Nation’s capital this winter to monitor ground tremors to better estimate the intensity of ground shaking that can be expected during future earthquakes in the area.

The project was announced today by U.S. Geological Survey acting director Suzette Kimball at an event at the National Building Museum promoting ShakeOut, an international earthquake drill involving more than 20 million people scheduled for Oct. 16.

“The surprising amount of damage to buildings here in Washington, D.C. during the 2011 Virginia earthquake – despite its relatively modest 5.8 magnitude and the epicenter being nearly 90 miles away – raised questions on how much seismic shaking is amplified by local geological conditions,” said Kimball.  “The installation of these seismometers should provide the information necessary to help us answer those questions and better estimate the intensity of shaking during future earthquakes in the area.”

Scientists from the USGS and Virginia Tech will begin the installations in November, locating the bowl sized sensors at various sites throughout the District of Columbia, including government facilities, parks, and private homes.

The extremely sensitive seismometers will remain in place until summer of 2015 to record weak ground shaking from distant earthquakes, as well as vibrations from regional earthquakes, quarry blasts and background noise generated by sources such as automobile traffic. The seismometers will continuously record information, with scientists periodically visiting the instruments to retrieve the data.

In time the results should provide information that will help architects and engineers mitigate the effects of future earthquakes when they design or renovate buildings in the area. Although no one can predict when the area will experience its next earthquake, the Eastern United States has the potential to experience larger, more damaging earthquakes than was experienced in 2011.

The seismometers are on loan from the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology, which is a consortium of more than 120 US universities and research institutions dedicated to facilitating investigations of earthquakes and Earth dynamics.

More than 450 aftershocks have been recorded since the Virginia earthquake, which was felt from central Georgia to central Maine, and west to Detroit and Chicago.  It is estimated that approximately one-third of the U.S. population could have felt the earthquake, which damaged the Washington National Cathedral and the Washington Monument.

Additional information about the earthquakes in Virginia is available online.

For more information visit the USGS Earthquake Hazard Program website.

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