reply to post by skycopilot
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Using sophisticated seismometers and GPS devices, scientists have been able to track minute movements along two massive tectonic plates colliding 25
miles or so underneath Washington state's Puget Sound basin. Their early findings suggest that a mega-earthquake could strike closer to the
Seattle-Tacoma area, home to some 3.6 million people, than was thought earlier. The deep tremors, which humans can't feel, occur routinely every 15
months or so and can continue for more than two weeks before they die back to undetectable levels. The instruments are detecting an inch or two of
movement — known as "episodic tremor and slip" — as the Juan de Fuca plate grinds and sinks beneath the North American plate. Closer to the
surface, the two plates are locked together.
When they snap, scientists say, it could produce a massive 9.0 or greater earthquake and a tsunami. By comparison, the largest earthquake ever
recorded was 9.5, in Chile in 1960. The largest in North America was the 9.2 Great Alaska earthquake in 1964, which spawned a tsunami that struck the
Northwest coast. The 1906 San Francisco earthquake, which killed 750 to 2,500 people, was estimated to be an 8.3.
Whereas the scientists once predicted that a mega-earthquake would be centered just off the Northwest coast, now — using data from the tremors
research — they say that it could be 30 miles or more inland, under the Olympic Peninsula, which lies to the west of Seattle and Tacoma across Puget
Sound. "The closer you are to the source, the stronger the shaking," said Steve Malone, a research professor emeritus at the University of
Washington.
Exactly how much stronger, and how much more damage such a quake would cause in the Puget Sound area, hasn't been calculated, Malone said.
Scientists have spent years studying what's known as the Cascadia subduction zone, an area where the two tectonic plants collide that stretches
roughly 600 miles off the coast of Northern California to southern British Columbia. As the Juan de Fuca plate slides under the North American plate,
the two can become locked. When plates become locked, pressure builds. The pressure is released in what scientists call a mega-thrust earthquake,
which easily can be magnitude 9.0. The Sumatra-Andaman Islands earthquake the day after Christmas in 2004 was a 9.2 mega-thrust quake that produced a
devastating Indian Ocean tsunami that killed an estimated 233,000 people in 11 countries. The last mega-thrust earthquake along the Cascadia
subduction zone, estimated at 9.2, was in January 1700. It produced a tsunami that reached Japan. Cascadia subduction zone mega-thrust earthquakes
happen on average every 400 to 500 years, but they can happen as little as 300 years apart or as much as 800. What's unique about the deep tremors,
which occur in an area stretching roughly from Olympia, Wash., to Canada's Vancouver Island, is that they reappear about every 15 months. While
tremors have been detected elsewhere along the Cascadia subduction zone, none is as regular or as prolonged as those in the Puget Sound basin, Dragert
said.
"Every 15 months it's like tightening the guitar string a little more," Dragert said. "You don't know whether it will take it beyond the break
zone."
[edit on 19-8-2009 by skycopilot]