EARTHQUAKES

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California Earthquakes
Oregon/Washington Earthquakes

RECENT EARTHQUAKES

 MAG    DATE    LOCAL-TIME  LAT     LON    DEPTH    LOCATION
        y/m/d     h:m:s     deg     deg     km

Volcanic activity

Mount St. Helens Volcano

Volcano Cams

more information

Global Earthquake Satellite System -- home page

Final GESS report -- results of the GESS study, with a 20 year plan for deploying a satellite network for monitoring signs of impending earthquakes. "There's a lot of excitement in the scientific community for getting really high-quality, high time-resolution measurements of surface deformation," says JPL's Carol Raymond, who led the study.

NASA's earthquake research -- links to various NASA research projects related to earthquakes

USGS Earthquake Hazards Program -- (USGS) home page

2003 Earthquake Probability Study -- for San Francisco Bay Area, by the USGS

ULF/ELF observations predict earthquakes -- (SPIE) An interview with Jack Dea, Naval Command, Control and Ocean Surveillance Center

QuakeSat -- (Stanford University) home page

QuakeFinder -- a company dedicated to detecting earthquake precursors from space. QuakeFinder has just launched QuakeSat.

A Cubesat-derived design for a unique academic research mission in earthquake signature detection -- (pdf format) more about Quakesat

Earthquake Links

The Society for the Prevention of Plate Tectonics (07-25-00)
Earthquake Prediction Online (06-11-00)
California Earthquakes
Oregon/Washington Earthquakes
Nevada Earthquakes
Earthquakes In The Western US
Intermountain West (Utah and Yellowstone)

United States

Western Hemisphere
Eastern Hemisphere
World Earthquakes

Near Real Time Earthquake List
CURRENT EARTHQUAKE MAPS
Global Earthquake Report

Volcano Links

OTHER

Sand Pendulum

Can We Predict Earthquakes?

Scientists so far have not been able to predict earthquakes. The suddenness with which they appear makes them as difficult to predict as tornadoes. They come in waves that move at speeds of 3.3 miles per second in surface rock, and 4.8 miles per second in the next layer of rock. An instrument called a seismograph measures the severity of the quake. But there is no instrument to date that can predict an earthquake.

American and Russian scientists are working on a theory which could possibly predict an earthquake, but only in regions where small earth tremors precede large earthquakes. Unfortunately, large earthquakes occur without any advance warnings, and that is where the predicting difficulties lie. California has many different earthquake detection devices, but Professor Clarence Allen of the California Institute of Technology thinks that we'll never learn to predict earthquakes unless we can trap a few. To do this he says we'll have to blanket California with many more than the 500 instruments now in use. China, a country that suffers frequently from the most devastating earthquakes, has enlisted all its farmers and citizens as part-time observers to help make predictions. They have a theory that animals behave restlessly and nervously prior to an earthquake. They also watch deep water wells for a murky discoloration, believing it to be a sign of an impending earthquake. Thus far they have made some successful predictions and also many false alarms.

 

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by Frank Cross.
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