NYC earthquake risk: Could Staten Island be heavily impacted?
Updated May 16, 4:31 AM; Posted May 16, 4:00 AM
Rubble
litters Main Street after an earthquake struck Sunday, Aug. 24, 2014,
in Napa, Calif. A report by the U.S. Geological Survey outlines the
differences between the effect of an earthquake in the West vs. one in
the East. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
STATEN
ISLAND, N.Y. – While scientists say it’s impossible to predict when or
if an earthquake will occur in New York City, they say that smaller
structures — like Staten Island’s bounty of single-family homes — will
suffer more than skyscrapers if it does happen.
„Earthquakes in the East tend to cause higher-frequency shaking — faster back-and-forth motion —
compared to similar events in the West,“ according to a report by the
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), published on its website
recently „Shorter structures are more susceptible to damage during fast
shaking, whereas taller structures are more susceptible during slow
shaking.“
DIFFERENCES IN INTENSITY
The report, „East vs West Coast Earthquakes,“
explains how USGS scientists are researching factors that influence
regional differences in the intensity and effects of earthquakes, and
notes that earthquakes in the East are often felt at more than twice the distance of earthquakes in the West.
Predicting
when they will occur is more difficult, said Thomas Pratt, a research
geophysicist and the central and Eastern U.S. coordinator for the USGS
Earthquake Hazards Program in Reston, Va.
„One
of the problems in the East Coast is that we don’t have a history to
study,“ he said. „In order to get an idea, we have to have had several
cycles of these things. The way we know about them in California is we
dig around in the mud and we see evidence of past earthquakes.“
Yet
Pratt wouldn’t rule out the possibility of a high-magnitude event
taking place in New York, which sits in the middle the North American
Tectonic Plate, considered by experts to be quite stable.
„We never know,“ he said. „One could come tomorrow. On the other hand, it could be another 300 years. We don’t understand why earthquakes happen (here) at all.“
Though
the city’s last observable earthquake occurred on Oct. 27, 2001, and
caused no real damage, New York has been hit by two Magnitude 5
earthquakes in its history – in 1738 and in 1884 — prompting many to say
it is „due“ for another.
While
earthquakes generally have to be Magnitude 6 or higher to be considered
„large,“ by experts, „a Magnitude 5, directly under New York City,
would shake it quite strongly,“ Pratt said.
The reason has to do with the rock beneath our feet, the USGS report says.
OLDER ROCKS
In
the East, we have older rocks, some of which formed „hundreds of
millions of years before those in the West,“ the report says. Since the
faults in the rocks have had so much time to heal, the seismic waves
travel more efficiently through them when an earthquake occurs.
„Rocks
in the East are like a granite countertop and rocks in the West are
much softer,“ Pratt said. „Take a granite countertop and hit it and
it’ll transmit energy well. In the West, it’s like a sponge. The energy
gets absorbed.“
If
a large, Magnitude 7 earthquake does occur, smaller structures, and
older structures in Manhattan would be most vulnerable, Pratt said. „In
the 1920s, ’30s and late 1800s, they were not built with earthquake
resistance,“ he said, noting that newer skyscrapers were built to
survive hurricanes, so would be more resistant.
When
discussing earthquake prediction and probability, Pratt uses the
analogy of a baseball player who averages a home run every 10 times at
bat and hasn’t hit one in the past nine games: „When he’s up at bat,
will he hit a home run? You just don’t know.“
And
though it would probably take a magnitude of 7 to topple buildings in
the city, smaller earthquakes are still quite dangerous, he said.
„Bookshelves
could fall down and hit you,“ he said. „People could be killed.“ A lot
of stone work and heavy objects fell from buildings when a quake of 5.8
magnitude struck central Virginia in 2011, he noted, but, fortunately,
no one was injured.
To
be safe, Pratt encourages New Yorkers to keep a few days‘ worth of
drinking water and other supplies on hand. He, himself, avoids putting
heavy things up high.
„It always gets me nervous when I go
into a restaurant that has heavy objects high on shelves,“ he said.
„It’s unlikely you’ll get an earthquake. But, we just don’t know.“
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