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- <text id=92TT1869>
- <title>
- Aug. 24, 1992: News From the Underground
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 24, 1992 George Bush: The Fight of His Life
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 54
- News from the Underground
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Recent quakes in California may have stirred the San Andreas
- Fault, setting it up for the long-dreaded Big One
- </p>
- <p>BY J. Madeleine Nash Landers
- </p>
- <p> "Talk about bad luck!" says Caltech geologist Brian
- Wernicke, squinting through a telescopic eyepiece at an aerial
- photo of Landers, California, a small town in the middle of the
- Mojave desert. "Wham! Right through this house. Wham! Right
- through that house. The funny thing is, there aren't that many
- houses out here."
- </p>
- <p> In more ways than one, the earthquake that rumbled through
- this desolate region on June 28 was an ominous force. In a few
- fearsome seconds, it rerouted roads, realigned parking lots and
- reconfigured the landscape in countless capricious ways,
- miraculously taking only one life. Rather than rupture a single
- fault line, it swiped a 70-km (45-mile) diagonal slash through
- several, at one point heaving up a raw ridge of rock roughly the
- size and shape of a stegosaurus' spine.
- </p>
- <p> For weeks afterward--even this past week--the region
- has been rocked by thousands of nerve-racking aftershocks, and
- the quake ignited mysterious swarms of smaller earthquakes in
- volcanic zones hundreds of kilometers away. But most alarming
- of all, this quake, the largest to hit Southern California in
- 40 years, appears to have substantially altered subterranean
- stress fields. In the process, it may have awakened a fitfully
- sleeping dragon--the mighty San Andreas, the nation's biggest
- and most dangerous fault.
- </p>
- <p> With a mixture of excitement and dread, scientists with
- the U.S. Geological Survey in Pasadena are rushing to augment
- an already extensive seismic network with portable
- instrumentation. "Before the San Andreas goes," reflects
- geologist Ken Hudnut somberly, "maybe we'll catch a precursor."
- A hot wind swoops across the desert as Hudnut retrieves a
- plastic box from under an oleander bush and pops the lid to
- reveal the small satellite receiver it shields from blowing
- sand. Nearby, a tripod-mounted antenna straddles a survey pipe
- like a spindly sentinel. Coded signals beamed down by orbiting
- satellites, Hudnut explains, serve to pinpoint the location of
- the pipe. The slightest shift in the pipe's position, and Hudnut
- will know the earth around it is on the move.
- </p>
- <p> The southernmost section of the San Andreas has made
- scientists jumpy for some time now. Between 1948 and 1986, the
- region adjacent to the fault experienced only one earthquake of
- magnitude 5.8 or higher.* Since then there have been seven,
- including the Landers quake, which weighed in at an impressive
- 7.5. Moreover, this surge in seismicity appears to be occurring
- on a worrisome schedule. Excavations of old lake-bed sediments
- by Caltech paleoseismologist Kerry Sieh in the mid-1980s
- indicate that large earthquakes have roared through this section
- of the San Andreas at not quite 300-year intervals. The last
- such quake took place circa 1680. "It's just a gut feeling,"
- ventures Sieh, who is 41 years old, "but I think I'll witness
- a great earthquake on the southern San Andreas in my lifetime."
- </p>
- <p> About 1,300 km (800 miles) long, the San Andreas Fault
- system separates two sections of the earth's crust known as
- plates. Like giant rafts, these plates glide across an expanse
- of superheated rock, viscous as tar, that surrounds the planet's
- molten outer core. At the rate of nearly 5 cm (2 in.) a year,
- the Pacific plate to the west of the San Andreas is slowly
- pushing north, past the North American plate on the east. One
- possible result: 60 million or so years from now, a sliver of
- the California coast that includes the megalopolis of Los
- Angeles could become beachfront property in Alaska.
- </p>
- <p> Getting there, however, will not be fun. The slip of the
- plates is not constant along the fault. The southern San Andreas
- bends like a river and splits into multiple branches. Because
- of this contortion, the Pacific and North American plates cannot
- slip in a straightforward way but must strain against each
- other like two sumo wrestlers. The battle of the plates has
- created numerous smaller fault lines along the San Andreas,
- giving the region the look of a smashed windshield. Over the
- millenniums, the Mojave shear zone to the east may offer a path
- of less resistance to the giant plates and replace the San
- Andreas as a new plate boundary, suggests geophysicist Amos Nur
- of Stanford.
- </p>
- <p> Only four years ago, scientists gave the stuck plates
- along the southernmost section of the San Andreas a 40% chance
- of snapping sometime in the next 30 years. At the same time,
- they warned that a rupture of this part of the fault could
- trigger earthquakes along neighboring segments, possibly as far
- west as San Bernardino and nearly as far north as Bakersfield.
- Result: the long-feared Big One--an earthquake of magnitude
- 8, five times as powerful as Landers--on the doorstep of the
- populous Los Angeles Basin. Now, in the seismic spoor of the
- Landers earthquake, scientists have found reason to suspect that
- the timetable for this disaster may have been fast-forwarded.
- </p>
- <p> A fateful chain reaction, seismologists believe, started
- in April, when an earthquake of 6.3 magnitude rattled the
- vicinity of Palm Springs and Joshua Tree National Monument. On
- a map, the fault that was then broken looks like a shotgun
- taking dead aim at Landers, and in fact it was. Two months
- later, a minor earthquake started on a fault with no name. For
- a few seconds, this temblor rattled at a magnitude of 3.
- Suddenly, seismometer readings soared as the fracture unzipped
- a sequence of larger faults nearby. Then three hours after the
- Landers earthquake shivered to a stop, a 6.6 aftershock
- terrified the environs of Big Bear Lake, collapsing chimneys and
- toppling buildings.
- </p>
- <p> Why Big Bear? In recent weeks research teams at the U.S.
- Geological Survey in Menlo Park have put this question to two
- different computer models. The results, while differing in
- detail, are strikingly similar. Before the effects of the
- Landers earthquake are taken into account, neither model flags
- the region around the Big Bear fault as particularly menacing.
- But as soon as scientists factor in the degree of ground
- movement and its direction, it pops up on their computer
- screens, color-coded red for danger.
- </p>
- <p> Of late, the two teams have begun to use their computer
- models to peer into the future. What they see in these high-tech
- crystal balls is unsettling. "To relieve the stress Landers
- placed on it," says geophysicist Ross Stein, "the southern San
- Andreas would have to produce a 6.5-magnitude earthquake of its
- own."
- </p>
- <p> The type of stress that has increased on the southern San
- Andreas is known as shear stress. It runs parallel to the fault,
- enhancing its tendency to slip. There is, however, another kind
- of stress, clamping stress, which retards slippage. It runs
- perpendicular to the fault, pinning the sides together like an
- invisible row of staples. "The situation we worry about most,"
- says UCLA geophysicist David Jackson, "is when the shear stress
- increases and the clamping stress decreases. This is precisely
- what we think has happened."
- </p>
- <p> The Landers and Big Bear earthquakes cut through faults
- that form two sides of a triangle. When these faults fractured,
- the huge block of earth contained within the triangle shifted
- about a meter to the north, unclamping the San Andreas at the
- triangle's base. In deference to the menace posed by this
- singular geometry, Jackson calls the area the "Bermuda
- Triangle."
- </p>
- <p> What everyone who lives in Southern California wants to
- know, of course, is not whether the southern San Andreas is
- going to slip, but when. To their frustration, scientists cannot
- answer that. The most careful calculations of stress transfer
- are based on the assumption that faults separate large blocks
- of earth, which stretch and compact in predictable ways. But the
- Southern California crust is so crisscrossed with faults that
- the material between them may behave more like sand. "Squeeze
- a block of wood," muses UCLA'S Jackson, "and it will become
- longer. But sand will behave in unforeseen ways."
- </p>
- <p> In addition, scientists can only guess how much total
- stress accumulated along the southern San Andreas prior to the
- Landers earthquake. Geophysicist Geoffrey King of the Institut
- de Physique du Globe in Strasbourg, France, compares the
- predicament to trying to push a car uphill while blindfolded.
- Will the car move or not? "One person won't accomplish much,"
- he observes, "but 10 people might. Our problem is that we don't
- know how many other people are already pushing on the car."
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, scientists still do not know how much stress is
- required to start an earthquake in the first place. In
- laboratory experiments, explains University of Nevada, Reno,
- seismologist James Brune, two blocks of granite forced past each
- other generate a tremendous frictional heat. But earthquakes
- apparently do not. "Nature," says Brune, "has figured out an
- easier way of moving things around." After all, when carpet
- installers try to move a rug, they do not attempt to drag it all
- at once. "Instead," says Tom Heaton of the U.S. Geological
- Survey in Pasadena, "they put a little ripple in it. As the
- ripple moves from one end of the rug to the other, the rug moves
- with it."
- </p>
- <p> What might cause such a ripple to spread across a fault
- remains a mystery. Numerous ideas have been suggested. Brune
- believes sliding rock physically deforms like tires squealing
- on pavement. In this case, what greases the skid is an invisible
- air pad that prevents the two surfaces from establishing
- frictional contact. Just last week, in a paper published by the
- science journal Nature, a team of researchers from the U.S.
- Geological Survey in Menlo Park offered an alternative
- possibility. Groundwater, they theorized, trapped under high
- pressure, might also serve to pry faults apart, allowing them
- to slip with a minimum expenditure of energy.
- </p>
- <p> Yet another mechanism capable of inducing fracture has
- been suggested by the Landers earthquake. Because the quake
- triggered scores of sympathetic vibrations in volcanic and
- geothermal regions, some scientists have speculated that the
- Landers event shook underground magma chambers as though they
- were big cans of soda. The gas that fizzed forth could, in turn,
- have forced open a gap that eased the slip of surrounding rock.
- Whatever the mechanism, experts agree, it has only hastened the
- fracture of a fault zone that was already stressed up and ready
- to go.
- </p>
- <p> What scientists fear is that the southern San Andreas has
- reached a similarly critical threshold. "If the Landers
- earthquake put a little stress on the San Andreas," exclaims
- Allan Lindh, chief seismologist of the U.S. Geological Survey,
- "then what about the accumulated stress of 300 years of plate
- motion?" For Lindh and other experts, the Landers quake and its
- resulting tremors are all too reminiscent of the increased
- seismic activity that preceded the great San Francisco blowout
- of 1906. "I mean," says Lindh, with a dramatic pause, "how much
- more on the edge of our chairs can we be?"
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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