Can We Save California?
Predicting earthquakes is one thing; preventing them would be something else
By DICK THOMPSON
Sometime in the next 30 years, according to the most recent
forecast from the U.S. Geological Survey, a large portion of the
San Francisco Bay Area will jump more than 3 ft. in less than 30
sec., shaking the ground for perhaps 100 miles and triggering an
earthquake with a magnitude of 6.7. Bridges will buckle.
Apartment buildings will pancake. The dorms at the University of
California, Berkeley, will roll like barrels on a wave. Water,
power and transportation lines will be cut. The subway that runs
under the bay could be a death trap. By the time the dust
settles, more than 100,000 people will be homeless. Economic
losses will total at least $35 billion. The human cost will be
immeasurable.
Is there a way to prevent this catastrophe? Probably not within
the next 30 years, but perhaps some day. No plans to stop a
quake in Northern California are seriously being considered, and
even if researchers had one they would like to try, enormous
scientific and legal barriers would stand in the way. But new
science, some accidental observations and a novel "microscope"
to study the spawning grounds of earthquakes have for the first
time made quake prevention something worth considering.
The basic science is pretty straightforward. The earth lurches
from time to time because its outer shell is broken into 11
huge, solid plates floating on a layer of molten rock that has
the consistency of Silly Putty. These tectonic plates are
constantly jostling each other, like rafts crowded into a small
pond, and it's along the boundaries where they meet that most
quakes are born. The two plates that form California's infamous
San Andreas Fault, the Pacific and the North American plates,
are the largest on Earth. And they're moving inexorably in
opposite directions.
Complicating matters is the fact that the plates don't slide
past each other very smoothly. Like two giant pieces of
sandpaper, they often get stucksometimes for hundreds of
years. The pressure keeps building until somethingoften a
juncture just a few miles below the earth's surfacesnaps. Then
the two plates move abruptly, sometimes great distances. A
California quake in 1857 separated fences and roads by as much
as 30 ft.
You might think that bolting the two plates together would fix
the problem or at least buy a little time. But given the forces
involved, holding the San Francisco Bay Area together for even a
brief period of time would require bolts the size of the World
Trade Center towersan engineering feat that not even a
modern-day Pharaoh could afford.
And where would you put them? The great San Francisco quake of
1906 cracked the earth across 350 miles, about one-third of the
northern San Andreas Fault. To make things worse, California is
riddled with faults that are smaller and not so well mapped as
the San Andreas. For example, the 1994 Northridge quake, which
registered a magnitude of 6.6 and caused $20 billion in damage,
occurred on a fault no one knew was there at all.
But the biggest problem with such a plan is that even when
bolted together, the plates would continue to build up stress,
and that stress would have to be relieved somewhere. A much
better approach would be to relieve the stress graduallywith a
lot of small quakesrather than let it accumulate. If man-made
quakes could move the fault just 1.67 in. a year, the Big One on
the northern San Andreas could be averted.
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