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Title: Forecast vs' Prediction


1
ESS 8 - Earthquakes - Week 9
Prof. Didier Sornette TAs Sara Cina and
Jelena Tomic
Shock Waves Through Los AngelesThe Northridge
Earthquake
http//www.ess.ucla.edu/academics/courses/web/fall
_2005/ess_8/index.asp
2
Plan
  • Dangers of living in fault zone
  • Where are the faults
  • How zoning relates to faults
  • Landslides

3
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4
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5
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6
Puente Hills Thrust Fault System
7
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8
"We are currently in a seismic lull that has
lasted at least since the first Europeans
arrived here more than 200 years ago," Dolan
said, "and that can't last forever."
http//www.scec.org/research/030404dolan.html
9
All known big faults in SoCal
Most faults have longer repeat times than San
Andreas
SCEC web page
10
How close is dangerous?
  • Magnitude of quake is the most important factor
  • Also construction quality
  • And softness of ground
  • On the fault is a special problem
  • Danger is sum of all active faults
  • Most dangerous when many nearby faults are
    active, like LA and Bay areas

11
Fault zone
  • Width
  • Legal definition for Special Studies Zone
  • 220 m on either side of mapped fault trace
  • Physical definition depends on how active and
    well-developed the fault is
  • Width of San Andreas fault zone 1-2 km
  • Significance few structures can withstand ground
    rupture

12
Hazards of faulting
  • Generally, quake hazard is from ground shaking
  • But ground shift (rupture) can be devastating
    right on fault trace
  • Greater ground shift and ground shaking in fault
    zone

13
Fault scarp in Armenia, 1988
14
Faulting damages buildings
  • Foundations are cracked and thrust apart
  • Vertical supports collapse or are knocked askew
  • Floors and roofs sag or fall
  • Thus, building can be torn apart

15
Example from Nicaragua
  • 4-story building on the fault
  • Reinforced concrete structure
  • Just 20 cm of fault offset
  • Building pancaked

16
Building on fault
Yanev, p. 29
17
Artists renditionof house torn in two
Yanev, p.30
18
Normalfaulting
San Fernando Yanev, p. 31
19
Damageinside
(Uninhabitable, a different house)
Yanev, p. 31
20
Ominous furrowsafter San Fernando quake
Yanev, p. 30
21
1959quakeinIdaho
Mighty scarp
EQ engineering 205
22
Idaho destruction
Flat house
Scarp
Yanev, p. 30,
EQ Eng. 208
23
Where are faults, exactly?
  • Alaska
  • Oregon, Washington, British Columbia
  • California
  • Wasatch Fault Zone

24
Alaska
  • Most dangerous in US
  • 8 quakes over M8 in last 90 years
  • Main fault is subduction thrust
  • Only surfaces on ocean floor
  • Many secondary faults
  • Sparsely populated
  • Also has volcanoes, tsunamis

25
1899-1979 Alaska quakes
Stars - M gt 7.5 Triangles - 6.5 to 7.5
Yanev, p. 175
26
Oregon-Washington
  • M 9 every 1000 years, last in 1700
  • Recent quakes
  • M 6.5 in 1965 in Seattle
  • M 7.1 in 1949 in Olympia
  • Main fault is subduction zone
  • Also volcanoes (like Mt. St. Helens)
  • Not adequately prepared
  • Weve looked at these faults before

27
PacificNorthwest
Iacopi, 27
28
California
  • Last 150 years, 2 or 3 quakes of M8
  • Main fault is strike-slip, on land
  • San Andreas fault zone
  • Easy to map in detail
  • Many secondary faults
  • Some offshore, some farther East
  • Weve talked about these faults already

29
Carizzo
  • San Andreas Fault zone in the Carrizo Plains

30
Officialfaults
San Andreas, Garlock, SoCal and Bay Area branches
Yanev, p. 42
31
Northern California
  • San Andreas
  • Runs through Point Arena, Point Reyes, San
    Francisco, San Jose, Watsonville
  • East Bay Faults
  • Calaveras-Hayward-Rodgers Creek
  • Some farther east
  • Offshore faults?

32
BayAreafaults
33
Southern California
  • San Andreas
  • Runs 30 km north of LA, thru San Bernadino, Palm
    Springs, Salton Sea, into Mexico
  • Faults under LA are hard to find
  • Mostly not strike-slip
  • Surface reworked by civilization
  • LA to San Diego - system of faults
  • SAF, San Jacinto, Elsinore faults

34
LA regional faults
Yanev, 195
35
Los Angeles faults
Keller, 4-2
36
Faults across Los Angeles
37
Geologists cross-section
Arvid Johnson
38
Newport-Inglewoodand hospitals
Yanev, 33
39
San Andreas near LA
Yanev, 187
40
San Andreas meets I5at Tejon Pass
Iacopi, 48
41
Northern LA faults
Yanev, 193
42
Faults in San Bernardino
Yanev, 191
43
Faultssouthof LA
Yanev, 187
44
Rest of US
  • Wasatch fault zone
  • Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming
  • About 10-25 as active as San Andreas
  • Mainly normal faults
  • New Madrid
  • Had some big quakes
  • We dont know how often they strike
  • Charleston, plus a few others

45
Wasatchfaultzone
Yanev, 203
46
National map of quakes
Subduction
Wasatch
New Madrid
Mostly small events
San Andreas
Rio Grande Rift
Yanev, 208
47
Examples of problems
  • Zoning
  • Daly City
  • Old laws not very good
  • Hayward fault
  • Old laws not very good
  • Salt Lake City
  • No laws
  • San Fernando
  • What were they thinking?

48
Daly City
  • Zoning ignores the presence of the fault

49
Daly City1956
Yanev, 34
50
Daly City in 1966
Yanev, 34
51
Bad neighborhood plan
Hayward Fault Yanev, 44
52
Better neighborhood plan
Hayward Fault Yanev, 44
53
Bad building site
Fault trace
Yanev, 45
Salt Lake City
54
Bad building site? Yes
San Fernando, 1972
Yanev, p. 45
55
Avoid living in fault zone
  • Should be zoned for parks
  • Or, at a minimum, roadways
  • It's best to live 5 miles or more away from
    faults
  • Often unrealistic
  • Even creeping faults are bad news

56
How strong will the shaking be? The
importance of the site
  • The strength of shaking depends on
  • Earthquake size
  • Distance to epicenter (actually to region of
    large slip)
  • also focusing or defocusing that may occur along
    the path from source to site
  • Site
  • nature of the ground just under the structure

57
Hazards of various geological foundations
  • Soft soils - stronger shaking
  • Wet soils - liquefaction potential, landsliding
    potential
  • Cliffs and ridges - stronger shaking, landsliding
    potential

58
Soft Sites
  • Stronger shaking on
  • Soft soil
  • Landfill
  • Waterside sites
  • Seismic waves grow in amplitude when they pass
    from rock into less rigid material such as soil
  • Soils behave like jelly in a bowl, which shakes
    much more than the plate

59
Soft vs. hard sites
  • Two quakes
  • 1906 San Francisco
  • 1989 Loma Prieta
  • Hills of San Francisco and Santa Cruz Mts felt
    moderate motions
  • But damage was concentrated in
  • Soft and deep soil sites
  • Especially landfill

60
Soft ground deforms
Yanev 49
61
Makes skewed streets
Yanev 49
1906 SF scene
62
Soft ground causes trouble
Missing story
Yanev 49
1989 Loma Prieta
63
Influence of soft ground
  • Softness can vary on a fine scale
  • Old filled stream beds
  • Sand dunes
  • Water-saturated muds
  • Motion can vary by factor of 4 in 100 m
  • 1906, near-surface geology mattered
  • Santa Rosa and San Jose as hard hit as SF due to
    soft ground downtown

64
Bay Areasoilconditions
Keller, 4-14
65
1906 SF damage pattern
Yanev 50
66
1906 damage in Santa Rosa
Iacopi 91
City Hall
67
1906 SF settling
Yanev 53
68
LA shaking pattern
Yanev 52
69
More on soft ground
  • Mexico City badly damaged in 1985
  • Quake more than 200 miles away
  • Extremely soft soil downtown
  • Soft sites common
  • LA, Bay Area, Seattle, Salt Lake City, Anchorage,
    Boston, New Orleans ...

70
High-rise buildingMexico City, 1985
Keller, 4-13
71
Destruction of subway in Kobe, Japan
72
Soil Liquefaction
  • Liquefaction compaction of water-saturated soil
    during intense shaking allows water to flow
    upward and the soil loses its shear strength and
    flows, becoming liquefied into a kind of
    quicksand
  • Liquefaction strikes soft, sandy water-saturated
    soils
  • Usually low-lying and flat
  • Buildings may tilt or sink into liquefied
    sediments tanks may float

73
Liquefaction during 1995 earthquake Kobe, Japan
74
More liquefaction
Watsonville, 1906
Kovach, 3-9
75
Sinking in quick sandin Niigata 1964
EQ Eng 230
76
Rising sewage tank
EQ Eng 230
77
TiltingbuildingsinNiigata
EQ Eng 232
78
Niigata 1964
Yanev 55
79
Landfills
  • Often poorly compacted material that often
    decays, producing voids and weak soils
  • Therefore
  • Strong shaking in earthquake
  • Ground can settle substantially
  • Newer landfill better compacted, but may still
    have problems in large quake
  • Often impossible to detect
  • Pre-WWII methods often leave voids
  • Clues
  • Sidewalk cracks, misalignment of adjacent
    buildings, doors, or windows can be clues

80
Tilting buildings
Differential settlement
Yanev 56, 58
81
Riverbanks
  • Riverbanks are often thick layers of soft, silty
    clay with a lot of water
  • Same problems for edges of bays and soil under
    levees
  • Many downtowns are on riverbanks
  • Riverbank towns often have old buildings

82
Riverbank collapse
River
Yanev 59
Salinas River in 1906
83
Waterside Sites
  • Like riverside sites
  • Soft soils, so stronger shaking
  • Alluvial soils clay and sand, often build up to
    very thick layers
  • Wet soils, so high liquefaction potential
  • Many roadways, railways, pipelines along the water

84
Roadwaycollapse
Road through Portage, AK in 1964
Iacopi, 19
85
Liquefaction in1989 Loma Prieta EQ under Highway
1 near Watsonville
Riverbed
86
Liquefaction damage at Hyogo Port, Kobe , Japan
87
Liquefaction damage on landfill at Port Island,
Kobe, Japan
Notice seaward slump
88
Disruption of hydrofoil service, Kobe, Japan
89
Cliffs and Ridges
  • Experience greater shaking because unsupported by
    ground and rock on one or both sides
  • As waves emerge from ground, they are reflected
    back from cliff face and cause further
    amplification of shaking
  • Energy trapped within peak of the ridge
  • Example Glenridge, Bel Air
  • Landslide and rockfall potential

90
Steep cliff
  • Landslide,
  • Kobe Japan

91
But hills can be okay
  • Generally, it is better to be on hard rock in
    mountains than on a soft basin, despite some
    amplification from cliffs and ridges.
  • Examples
  • Santa Monica Mts. did OK in Northridge
  • Santa Cruz Mts. had some problems in Loma Prieta
  • But mainly due to bad construction

92
Tagged buildings after Northridge Earthquake,
1994
93
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94
Demonstration of focusing effect by a
curved Interface between two different layers
P. Davis
95
GAO S LIU H DAVIS PM KNOPOFF L. LOCALIZED
AMPLIFICATION OF SEISMIC WAVES AND CORRELATION
WITH DAMAGE DUE TO THE NORTHRIDGE EARTHQUAKE -
EVIDENCE FOR FOCUSING IN SANTA MONICA. BULLETIN
OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1996
FEB, V86 N1S209-S230.
96
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97
Landslides
  • Landslide a chunk of ground, usually wet and
    weak, breaks loose, then slides down hill
  • Earthquakes often trigger landslides
  • Landslide most common on hillsides, steep slopes
  • From both natural and man-made causes
  • Seasonal problem, worst after heavy rains
  • Luckily, Loma Prieta, San Fernando, and
    Northridge struck in dry weather
  • San Fernando (Northridge) earthquake
  • Even in dry season, caused 1000 (10000)
    landslides, with 50 feet of sliding

98
Landslide schematic
Keller, 7-3
99
Kinds of slides
  • Landslides
  • Mud slides
  • Debris flows (volcanoes)
  • Rock falls
  • Generic landslides
  • Snow and Ice
  • Avalanches
  • First well look at slow slides

100
Earthflow
Australia, also visible along Hwy 5
NOAA slides
101
Pacific Palisades slumps
NOAA slides
102
Glen Canyon talus cones
NOAA slides
103
Swiss slump
NOAA slides
104
Big slide
1906, Frank, Alberta, over in 2 minutes, buried a
whole town
NOAA slides
105
LandslidePeru, 1970due to quake,60,000
killed,16 km slide,4 km drop,with glacial ice
Before
After
Keller, 13-9
106
Path ofPeru slide


Picture in previous figure
107
In 1970, an earthquake-induced rock and snow
avalanche on Mt. Huascaran, Peru, buried the
towns of Yungay and Ranrahirca. The total death
toll was 66,700. The avalanche started with a
sliding mass of glacial ice and rock about 909 m
(3,000 ft) wide and 1.6 km (1 mi) long that swept
downslope about 14.4 km (9 mi) to Yungay at an
average speed of over 160 km (100 mi) an hour.
Ice picked up morainal material and by the time
the mass reached Yungay, it is estimated to have
consisted of about 2,200,000 m3 (80,000,000 ft3)
of water, mud, and rocks.
108
Translational landslide about 30 - 40 meters deep
that blocked a valley in March - April, 1973. The
slide occurred in Neogene molasses on the
southern slope of Blidisel Hill in the Buzau
Subcarpathians. The slide was reactivated during
the March 4, 1977 earthquake in the eastern
Carpathians. Photograph Credit Dr. Dan
Balteanu, Romanian Academy.
109
Slides major California problem
  • Rapid tectonics
  • Particularly fast-rising mountains
  • Ample rain for lubrication
  • Coast heavily built-up
  • Presence of quakes

110
Californiatroublesin 1997-98
Cities with slides are red
Next figure
http//geology.wr.usgs.gov/wgmt/elnino
111
Example San MateoCountyslides
San Fran
The Bay
Daly City
Red areas have slid
San Jose
112
MoreproblemsforDaly City
Davidson, 15-9
113
The Blackhawk landslide (17kyrs BP)
5 miles
2 miles
Certainly the largest slide in the Transverse
Range province is the Blackhawk, on the north
slope of the San Bernardino Mountains This
prehistoric slide is one of the largest known in
North America. It was studied in detail by R. L.
Shreve, who showed that the slide moved to it's
resting place on a cushion of compressed air.
114
Southern California mess
Tarbucks, 3-23
Made worse by loss of vegetation
115
A slide at night
  • Castle Rock Road, in Laguna Canyon
  • February 23, 1998
  • Heavy rains
  • A dozen small soil slips converged
  • Powerful enough to take some houses for a ride
  • Typical hillside in a residential area

116
Castle Rock Road slide
117
Side of a slideCleveland Corral slide
Left edge
http//vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Projects/CalifLandslide/
Images
118
Mill CreekJan. 1997
http//vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Projects/CalifLandslide/
Images
119
Mill Creekslide,blockedHwy 50
Hwy 50
http//vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Projects/CalifLandslide/
Images
120
Nationwide
  • Slides problems mainly coincide with mountains
  • Pacific coast
  • Colorado
  • Appalachians
  • New Hampshire
  • Alaska, Hawaii
  • North America
  • 50 deaths, 2,000,000,000 per year

121
National slide hazard
122
Coal slide tragedy
  • In Aberfan, South Wales
  • October 21, 1966
  • Pile of debris from coal mine
  • called a tip
  • which had been weakened by water
  • Slid 1 km
  • Thru cottages, over a canal, then
  • into Pantglas Junior High School
  • Killed 144 people, 116 school kids

123
SouthWalescoalslide
Murphy, 14-41
124
Sinkhole, Floridatook 3 days to form, not really
a landslide
Keller, 7-21
Even flat land can have problems
125
Hong Kong slide
Press, 1-20
126
Rio de Janeiro
Keller, 7-13
Many landslide risk factors - steep, fractured
rock, rain, denudation
127
Slides started by quakes
  • 1971 San Fernando, lots of little ones
  • 1994 Northridge, coastal slide
  • Turkey, road closure
  • Tadzhikistan slides, mud slide
  • Montana, slide as a dam
  • 1970 Peru quake had bad slide
  • 1964 Alaska most dramatic example

128
Before
  • Sherman Glacier, Alaska

129
After
  • 1964 Alaska quake

130
Dust from an aftershock
San Fernando quake
Iacopi, 28
131
Obscure quake risk
  • 1994 Northridge quake
  • Lots of dust floated out over LA
  • Valley Fever (not related to disco)
  • Carried by spores in near-surface dust
  • Incidence of Valley Fever doubled in months after
    quakes
  • An extra 60 deaths
  • Doubled death toll from Northridge

132
Northridge slide
Davidson, 384
133
Same Northridge plunge
Was a big house
Front cover - Vogel
134
Slide from quake in Turkey
200 m
1966
135
15 m high mudflow quake in Tadzhikistan, 1989
slopes weakened by rain
People now living on roof
136
Landslide as a dam
100m high 28 buried 1959 quake
NOAA slides
Montana
137
Turnagain Slide, Anchorage1964 Alaska
  • Slide 3 km wide and 400 m deep
  • A second slide dropped the business district 10
    feet
  • Slide was previously recognized and mapped
  • Area that slid has been rebuilt
  • Best views in town

138
1964 Turnagain Heights Landslideup close
139
Slumping in downtown Anchorage from 1964 Alaska
earthquake
140
Summary of soft ground
  • Landslides
  • Can result from natural or man-made problems
  • Biggest slides are natural
  • Soft soils have several problems
  • Liquefaction, landslide, settling, river banks
  • Indications of various problems are similar
  • Yanev (an engineer) says to consult an engineer
  • Tsunamis can hit some of the same areas

141
Mitigation
  • Land-use restrictions
  • Dont live under slides
  • Correct cut-and-fill techniques
  • Dont denude hillsides
  • Engineering
  • Deflect or trap sliding material
  • Keep hillside drained (more dry)
  • Install retaining walls, anchors
  • Monitor for sliding

142
This map shows the scale of the landslide, which
slopped the contents of the reservoir over the
dam and killed more than 2000 people in Longarone
and the adjoining communitie
Upstream view of the landslide
The Vaiont landslide in the Dolomites (northern
Italy)
143
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144
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145
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146
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147
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148
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149
A. Helmstetter, D. Sornette, J.-R. Grasso, J. V.
Andersen, S. Gluzman and V. Pisarenko, Slider-Bloc
k Friction Model for Landslides Implication for
Prediction of Mountain Collapse. J. Geophys.
Res., 109, B02409, doi10.1029/2002JB002160 (2004)
D. Sornette, A. Helmstetter, J.V. Andersen, S.
Gluzman, J.-R. Grasso and V.F. Pisarenko Towards
Landslide Predictions Two Case Studies, Physica
A 338, 605-632 (2004)
150
Key concepts
All slopes are subjected to damage and healing
processes accumulating over time. Some fail,
other take longer. It is just a matter of time
Most of our landscape is due to the
accumulation of landslides, triggered or not by
earthquakes. Like rupture of concrete in the
lab.
151
European Alps pre-historical landslides
152
30-yr probability of quakes in California
Parkfield
1906 repeat
1857 repeat
Yanev p. 39
1857-type is given 30 chance in 30 years
153
Predicted shaking from Hayward fault event
154
Combine earthquakes
From all known faults
and some model of unknown faults
155
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156
A probability map for SoCal
Number of times that 20 g will be exceeded per
century
SCEC web page
157
World Hazard
158
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159
Philippines, 1990
160
Europe,Middle East,and Africa
Turkey, 1999
161
Americas
Mexico City, 1985
162
Hazard and Risk
  • Hazard probability that a given area will be
    affected by a given destructive process
  • Risk Probability that a loss will occur

163
Hazard and Risk, continued
  • Hazard is what seismologists predict
  • Includes earthquake probability
  • Risk is what insurance companies, the government,
    etc. need to know.
  • How do we close the gap?
  • Risk hazard vulnerability value

164
HAZUS Average Annualized EQ Losses
  • Dr. Stuart Nishenko
  • Senior Seismologist
  • Building Sciences
  • and Assessment
  • Branch, FEMA
  • WSSPC Conference
  • Seattle, WA
  • September 20, 2000

FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency
165
FEMA Hazus results
  • Average Annual Earthquake Loss by state

Nishenko, 2002
166
Average Annual Earthquake Loss per Capita for 35
Metropolitan Areas
167
Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Benefit-cost ratio
  • Calculate annual benefits
  • Multiply by lifetime
  • Calculate projected cost of
  • special earthquake construction
  • Take ratio to get benefit/cost ratio
  • Would it be better to spend this money on new
    schools, hospitals, etc.

168
Starquakes in neutron stars
  • Flashes of soft g-rays repeaters
  • Source of starquake fracture in the neutron star
    crust (1km thick)
  • strain energy 1039 Joules gtgt 1019 Joules for
    largest earthquakes
  • Star SGR1806-20 sun mass in 20km diameter,
    density 1014, rotation in 7.5s, magnetic field
    1015 Gauss.
  • Crust made of solid lattice of heavy nuclei with
    free electron very heavy metal
  • Stress loading magnetic forces

http//solomon.as.utexas.edu/duncan/magnetar.html
169
The Earths magnetic field, which deflects compass
needles
(measured at the N magnetic pole)
0.6 Gauss A
common iron magnet like those used to stick
papers on a refrigerator 100 Gauss
The strongest man-made fields achieved
so far in the laboratory
Sustained
(steady) 4 105 Gauss
The strongest man-made fields achieved so far
in the laboratory
Ephemeral (made using
explosives lasts only milliseconds)
107 Gauss The maximum field
observed on ordinary stars 106 Gauss
Typical magnetic field of radio pulsars
1012
Gauss (the ordinary, familiar kind of neutron
star (hundreds are known to astronomers)


Magnetars (soft gamma repeaters) 1014 -
1015 Gauss
170
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171
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172
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173
Case agt b application to starquakes
Comparison of numerical simulations and a
starquake sequence
(Sornette and Helmstetter, 2002)
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