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Better Earthquake Forecasting
For 25 years, geophysicist Rob McCaffrey has been monitoring
earthquake activity and plate convergence at subduction zones
around the world, including the Sumatra subduction zone in
Indonesia where December’s devastating magnitude 9 earthquake
occurred.
“Large earthquakes are common in South Asia, generating
smaller tsunamis every few decades. But a magnitude 9 is very
rare,” says McCaffrey, professor of earth and environmental
sciences. “This is about as big as it could get along that
fault line. It will likely be many centuries before a magnitude
9 quake hits that section of the fault again, but a quake of
similar size could occur along the fault south of Java or
Sumatra.”
Scientists have yet to develop a reliable system to predict
earthquakes. Still, McCaffrey says tsunami warning systems,
which can predict tsunami arrival times at coastal communities,
can and should be improved and expanded.
McCaffrey estimated that about three hours passed by between
the time the earthquake occurred off the coast of Sumatra and
when the resulting tidal wave struck Sri Lanka more than 1,000
miles away.
“If there was a warning system in place in the Indian Ocean,
people in Sri Lanka surely would have had time to get to higher
ground,” McCaffrey told the Albany Times Union
newspaper.
An extensive tsunami warning system has been installed on
the floor of the Pacific Ocean, but not in the Indian
Ocean.
McCaffrey’s research interests include the analysis of
geological, seismological, gravity, and geodetic data from
convergent margins with attention to the structure, tectonics,
and dynamics of subduction and collision. “We examine
earthquake statistics to understand what factors control when
and where large earthquakes occur, measuring temperature of the
faults, earthquake magnitude distributions, fault slip rates,
etc.,” McCaffrey says. “The goal is to see how much we can
learn about future earthquakes from what has happened in the
past.”
Originally published in
Rensselaer Magazine, Spring 2005
Photo by Mark McCarty
Published
April 1,
2005
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