VashonBePrepared Weekly Newsletter

Newsletter #161 Friday, December 6, 2024(full newsletter)

  • Respiratory Virus Season: Just Around the Corner
  • First Defense: Vaccination
  • Deploy Layers of Protection
     
  • Temporada de Virus Respiratorios: A la Vuelta de la Esquina
  • Primera Línea de Defensa: Vacunación
  • Implemente Capas de Protección

GetPrepared
COVID Vaccine

Learn about the many ways you can prepare for disasters at home or at your business.

Get Alerts
...

Sign up for Voice of Vashon's emergency alerts, VashonBePrepared's weekly newsletter, and other regional alerts.

About Us
...

VashonBePrepared is a coalition of some 10 disaster preparedness organizations on Vashon-Maury Island in Washington's Puget Sound region. We work closely with local and county organizations.

I Want to Help Out

VashonBePrepared provides training and educational opportunities to keep the island community prepared for the next emergency.

Latest Updates

How Severe was that Quake Anyway?!

Apr 25

Written by:
4/25/2011 12:52 PM  RssIcon

image King County OEM’s Pascal Schuback had a neat 138 character tweet today that took me well over an hour to digest:

Know the difference 2B ready RT @USGS: How much bigger is a 8.7 2A 5.8? Click "Try It Yourself" Calculator at top of http://go.usa.gov/baq

As they note on their site, http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/topics/how_much_bigger.php:

The magnitude scale is really comparing amplitudes of waves on a seismogram, not the STRENGTH (energy) of the quakes. So, a magnitude 8.7 is 794 times bigger than a 5.8 quake as measured on seismograms, but the 8.7 quake is about 23,000 times STRONGER than the 5.8! Since it is really the energy or strength that knocks down buildings, this is really the more important comparison. This means that it would take about 23,000 quakes of magnitude 5.8 to equal the energy released by one magnitude 8.7 event.

image The thing they don’t really mention is that these numbers discuss the total energy released by a quake – NOT the intensity of shaking on the surface as experienced by humans and buildings – which is known as the (Modified) Mercalli intensity scale. A deep quake (Nisqually was 6.8 on the moment magnitude scale but 32 miles deep) has a much less serious impact than a shallow quake – as was modeled by the recent Tacoma Fault scenario (7.1 at 9 miles deep). Shallow quakes are much more likely to have damaging aftershocks too boot. Local soils can further alter conditions felt on the surface, as the caption of the Tacoma Fault map indicates.

Probably even more useful is the peak acceleration – which is used by the USGS for their http://earthquake.usgs.gov/hazards/. Their documentation for this goes into hopeless detail on how best to measure the impact of quakes across the US.

How likely are any of these? That’s a whole other convoluted topic, but the simple answer is to go to http://earthquake.usgs.gov/hazards/apps/ and map it yourself. Most anyway you look at this though: Vashon needs to be ready for a big one!

Categories:
Location: Blogs Parent Separator John's Blog
bflix