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4.3: Today's Risk at New Madrid

  • Page ID
    7006
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    What if the 1811–1812 sequence happened today?

    Check this out!

    This is a slick USGS-produced poster with an overview of historical earthquakes in the New Madrid Seismic Zone. For best viewing, you will want to download the file from the USGS so you can zoom in and read the text.

    Three Centuries of Earthquakes

    Before you proceed, please complete the following reading assignment. Then, in the next part of the lesson, we will discuss the scientific background necessary to appreciate why there is a scientific controversy over the level of seismic hazard in the central USA.

    Reading assignment

    Gomberg, J., & Schweig, E. (2002). Earthquake hazard in the heart of the homeland. Fact Sheet - U. S. Geological Survey, 4.

    This reading is a fact sheet published by the USGS in 2002 that addresses the level of present-day earthquake hazard in the central USA. As you read, think about the following:

    • Why does the USGS produce different seismic hazard maps for different probabilities and time periods? In practice, what does this mean to you when you look at a hazard map?
    • On the hazard map shown on page 2 of the fact sheet, why is the central USA given a hazard rating as high as that for the San Andreas fault area in California?
    • Why is paleoseismology important in determining the seismic hazard of a region?
    • What are the probabilities of various sizes of earthquakes happening in given time periods? How were these numbers determined? (Can you tell from this fact sheet? Can you list everything you'd need to estimate or assume in order to make a probability prediction?)

    Tell me about it!

    If you have questions or comments, especially pertaining to the questions I have posed above, please post to the Questions discussion. There is nothing to submit for this assignment, but you will want to read this fact sheet thoughtfully because your final assignment for this lesson will be to rewrite and update it with new data.


    This page titled 4.3: Today's Risk at New Madrid is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Eliza Richardson (John A. Dutton: e-Education Institute) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.