Scientists
predict thousands will die from earthquake expected anytime on US
West Coast
Researchers
say a massive earthquake and tsunami could soon strike the Northwest
US coast, killing more than 10,000 people, flooding entire towns, and
causing economic damages totaling $32 billion.
RT,
15
March, 2013
An
alarming report published by the Oregon Seismic Safety Policy
Advisory Commission warns about the dire effects of the quake and
claims that it is imminent and could strike anytime. The report,
which was compiled by a group of more than 150 volunteer experts, was
requested by the Oregon legislature in order to adequately prepare
for the looming disaster.
The
last high magnitude earthquake in the region occurred in the year
1700 in the Cascadia Subduction Zone. The quake had a magnitude
between 8.7 and 9.2, and geologists in 2010 predicted that there is a
37 percent change of another such quake occurring within 50 years.
The new report claims that there is a 100 percent chance of a monster
earthquake occurring in the region – but scientists don’t know
when.
"This
earthquake will hit us again," Kent Yu, an engineer and chairman
of the commission, told lawmakers. "It's just a matter of how
soon."
Jay
Wilson, vice chairman of the commission that put together the report,
told AP that “we’re well within the window for it to happen
again.”
With
no time frame for the predicted earthquake, Oregonians need to be
constantly prepared for one. The report warns of death and
devastation ranging from British Columbia to Northern California, the
worst of which will strike Oregon.
"Oregonians
as individuals are underprepared," Maree Wacker, chief executive
officer of the American Red Cross of Oregon, told AP.
An
earthquake, together with the resulting tsunami, could leave
Oregonians without water, power, heat, telephone services, and in
some cases, gasoline. After a deadly earthquake and tsunami hit Japan
in 2011, lawmakers grew concerned that a similar disaster could occur
in the US. The report says that geographically, Oregon and Japan are
almost identical – but that Japan was far more prepared than Oregon
would be if it faced the same fate.
The
most recent report is not the first warning of an imminent
high-magnitude quake. In 2012, researchers at Oregon State University
published a study concluding that there is a 40 percent chance of a
major earthquake in the Coos Bay, Ore., region during the next 50
years.
The
Northwest US is long overdue for an earthquake, and it’s only a
matter of time before the coast once again witnesses a quake with a
magnitude higher than 8.0.
“By
the year 2060, if we have not had an earthquake, we will have
exceeded 85 percent of all the known intervals of earthquake
recurrence in 10,000 years,” Jay Patton, co-author of the Oregon
State University, said in a press release. “The interval between
earthquakes ranges from a few decades to thousands of years. But we
already have exceeded about three-fourths of them.”
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