Questions raised by Travellerev of Aotearoa; a Wider Perspective:
“Correct
me if I'm wrong but why would scientists be touchy about what causes
Earthquakes. They have been researching and monitoring them for ages
after all. Could it be there were no fault lines under Christchurch
and if there weren't than why did such intense and destructive
Earthquakes occur?”
Scientists
touchy over earthquake information
Scientists
were touchy, even defensive, about communicating the science behind
Canterbury's earthquakes, documents show.
17
September, 2012
Papers
given to The Press under the Official Information Act (OIA) reveal
discussions between scientists and the Government over scientific
material. They also show disagreements.
The
response from the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (Cera)
contains emails, draft press releases, reports and meeting minutes
but also a lot of withheld information.
An
email to a government official from natural hazards platform manager
and GNS Science principal scientist Kelvin Berryman the morning after
the deadly magnitude-6.3 February 22, 2011, quake showed a push to
ensure scientists presented a united front.
"We
regard the Lyttelton event as a late and large aftershock of the Sept
4 Darfield earthquake. I will make sure the researchers use this
terminology going forward."
The
same day, Berryman addressed the parliamentary education and select
committee.
Minutes
of the meeting said: "Scientists from the Institute of
Geological and Nuclear Sciences (GNS) were hoping that time period
when a large aftershock in the vicinity of a magnitude 6 . . . had
passed. Sadly, they were mistaken, the committee heard."
In
the minutes next to that, a comment was added by "GNS"
saying: "I don't think ‘mistaken' is the best choice of words
- ‘sadly, CHCH has not been so fortunate' might be better-balanced
words."
On
March 15, Berryman emailed two government officials anxious about
Royal Society of New Zealand (RSNZ) input to a Science Media Centre
press conference the next day.
"Attached
are comments I have made on the so-called RSNZ position paper.
"I
have concerns that this is available at the press release (sic) - it
means Q&A will rapidly become very technical and specific - not
the strength of talking heads except for Terry Webb [of GNS Science].
"In
the attached you will also see that I have quite a few issues with
several of the answers.
"Time
is getting short but if the RSNZ are not willing to modify this list
then I will insist the [natural hazards] platform association is
deleted. Don't want to do this, but . . ."
A
question in the Royal Society paper - "why wasn't some warning
given about the possibility of a big and damaging aftershock under
the city?" - drew the ire of Berryman and others in comments in
the paper's margin.
"JW6"
said: "Surely the best answer here is that warnings were given
about aftershocks?
"A
quick flick through GNS and CDEM [Civil Defence-Emergency Management]
media releases fails to find such a warning.
"So
either we should show examples that warnings did take place, or admit
that there should have been more warning."
Below
that, the comment labelled "GNS" - presumably Berryman -
said: "Who is this comment from? All of the people of CHCH know
I was saying this in presentations, to the media and at meetings, eg
recovery group meeting at Commodore Hotel for 100 participants on
October 5."
Commenting
on the question, "have new faults appeared under Christchurch
after these earthquakes?", "GNS" - again presumably
Berryman - said: "This doesn't make any sense. Have new faults
appeared where?
"If
all earthquakes occur on faults, then by definition there are a whole
bunch of faults under or near CHCH.
"Is
this really what we want to say?"
On
October 13, Berryman emailed a warning to scientists and others about
the royal commission hearings due to start in Christchurch.
The
email was a "heads up" the enhanced building code seismic
factors - the Z factor - would "be in the limelight".
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