Skip to main content

Anchorage suffered a 7.0 magnitude earthquake, but was spared a tsunami

[ad_1]


Roads broke apart, cracks radiated up buildings, and books fell from shelves today when a magnitude 7.0 earthquake rocked Anchorage, Alaska and surrounding areas.



The quake struck around 8:30 a.m. local time (12:30 p.m. on the East Coast), triggering a tsunami warning and driving some residents to evacuate inland. A number of aftershocks between magnitudes 4 and 5.8 continued to hit the Cook Inlet, just south of where the Aleutian Islands meet the mainland, before the tsunami warning was canceled. At press time, no injuries had been reported.



The ground shook for more than a minute, forcing people to take shelter under desks and doorframes as seen in this footage taken by KTVA 11 from an Anchorage courthouse.


The shaking substantially damaged infrastructure, reducing multiple roads to fractured slabs, cutting power, and sending cracks through buildings. The Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport has halted flights, and utilities warned residents to watch out for gas leaks and downed electrical wires.


Anchorage’s geology may have exacerbated the effects, according to ABC News. The city sits on a sediment basin—ground closer in consistency to sand than to rock—which can slow waves down and amplify them. The extent of the event is being compared to a 1989 earthquake that struck San Francisco during the World Series.



Seismograph needles jumped as far away as Kentucky, underscoring the force of the event. On the Richter Scale, the magnitude represents how far the needle swings, but is measured logarithmically, so moving up one level brings a 10-fold increase in shaking and about a 30-fold increase in energy released. That means the original magnitude 7 shaking was 100 times more violent than any magnitude 5 aftershocks. Earthquakes also become much rarer as you move up the scale, with fewer than 20 of the size that occurred today taking place globally each year.



Alaska, which sits at the top of the geologically active Ring of Fire, feels about 40,000 annual earthquakes, and experienced the most powerful earthquake in U.S. history—a magnitude 9.2 that shook Prince William sound in 1962. That quake marked the second largest in recorded history, after a magnitude 9.5 that hit Chile two years before.



[ad_2]

Written By Charlie Wood

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ice technicians are the secret stars of the Winter Olympics

[ad_1] The emphasis of this year's two-week-long Winter Olympic Games has been placed squarely on the Olympians themselves. After all, the stated purpose of the international competition is to bring together the world’s greatest athletes in a nail-biting competition across fifteen different winter sports. But before the curlers, skiers, and skaters even arrived in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the Olympians of the ice technician world were already a few weeks deep in a competition of their own. Mark Callan of the World Curling Federation and Markus Aschauer of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation both say they’re hoping to make the best ice the Winter Olympics have ever seen. To transform the barren concrete jungle of existing tracks and arenas into an ice- and snow-covered wonderland is an enormous undertaking. And it takes a keen understanding of the physics and chemistry that keeps frozen precipitation pristine. Curling Callan has been making and maintaining ic...

How to avoid the mid-movie bathroom break

[ad_1] Long movies and the urge to pee have been linked since the early days of cinema. Sixty-three years before Avengers: Endgame and its three-hour runtime, moviegoers settled in for nearly four hours of The Ten Commandments . “There will be an intermission,” director Cecil B. DeMille announced during the movie’s introduction. And audiences’ bladders were relieved. On average, movies aren’t getting longer, but they also don’t come with a predetermined bathroom break. That means when nature calls, you’ve got to either sit in growing discomfort or gamble on the best time to run to the restroom. But it doesn’t have to be this way, and for most people, setting your body to “do not disturb” is fairly simple. Go before the show The first piece of advice is also the easiest: pee before the movie starts. Generally, healthy adults urinate every 3-4 hours, so the longer a movie runs, the more urgent it becomes to reset your internal p...

Humans flourished through a supervolcano eruption 74,000 years ago (so you can make it through Tuesday)

[ad_1] About 74,000 years ago, a large chunk of a Pacific island exploded. It sent ash and other debris around the world, including to the southern tip of Africa, where it would be found by a team of international scientists and entered as the latest data point in one of the hottest debates in paleoanthropology ( I know ): Did the Toba supervolcano thrust our planet into a 1,000-year volcanic winter, thus bottle-necking animals and plants alike? Or was it just a little blip on our historic radar? That’s the contentious arena into which our intrepid researchers venture, this time with a new study in Nature establishing that humans in modern-day South Africa not only survived, but flourished after the Toba eruption. Where once was (we think, maybe) a mountain, there is now a huge caldera with a lake inside, and an island inside that. Their evidence shows that debris from the explosion landed 9,000 kilometers (5592.3 miles) away, the farthest distance traveled ever recorded for the ...