Los Angeles Times

Nevada man could be sole fatality in Ridgecrest quakes

Authoritie­s believe jolt may have shifted car that crushed Troy Ray, 55, of Pahrump.

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For all the power of the Ridgecrest earthquake­s — the strongest with an epicenter in Southern California in nearly two decades — the only death related to the temblors may have actually occurred outside the state.

The death in Nevada is illustrati­ve of the significan­t earthquake risk the Silver State, though not as bad as California, still endures. The Reno area, for instance, has a seismic risk that approaches that of the San Francisco Bay Area, according to Nevada state geologists.

Troy Ray, 55, was apparently working underneath his car in his hometown of

Pahrump, Nev., 95 miles northeast of the epicenter, when the vehicle is believed to have fallen on him.

The sudden movement from an earthquake may have shifted the car, causing the man to die of traumatic asphyxia, Sgt. Adam Tippetts of the Nye County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement. He also suffered blunt-force injury.

Ray’s body was found on July 9, five days after the first significan­t Ridgecrest quake.

It is plausible that Ray’s car fell from the shaking felt in Pahrump from the magnitude 6.4 earthquake on July 4, the foreshock to the magnitude 7.1 quake that came a day later, according to U.S. Geological Survey research geophysici­st Morgan Page.

According to the USGS’ shake map, weak shaking (intensity level 3 on the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale) was probably felt in Pahrump from that quake.

There has never been a documented death from an earthquake in Nevada, according to Craig dePolo, earthquake geologist at the state Bureau of Mines and Geology, who has exhaustive­ly researched records of the 23 earthquake­s with epicenters in Nevada of magnitude 6 or greater. “If indeed Mr. Ray’s death was caused by an earthquake, it would be the first time it’s been recorded,” he said.

He did not go as far as to say the death was definitive­ly Nevada’s first on record caused by an earthquake. “We don’t know absolutely whether the death in Pahrump was caused by the earthquake, but it appears to have been,” DePolo said. “It’s not definitive as I understand it. Nobody saw it actually happen.”

It’s possible that there have been deaths from Nevada quakes that have not been documented, he said. There has been a tradition of towns in rural Nevada to avoid publicizin­g damage or injuries from disasters such as fires, for fear of scaring away investors. “Earthquake informatio­n tends to be a private thing.… It definitely is a Nevada thing,” he said.

Nevada has been largely quiet of destructiv­e earthquake­s since the 1960s, except for the magnitude 6 Wells earthquake of 2008, which caused an abandoned two-story building to collapse and two more buildings to partially collapse, and damaged about 30 others. Officials reported $19 million in damage.

But from the 1850s to the 1950s, there were 22 earthquake­s of magnitude 6 or greater in Nevada.

“Up until about the 1960s, Nevada was very active,” DePolo said. “It used to be known as an earthquake state, just like California. But we’ve lost a lot of the folklore because there’s been fewer earthquake­s. Awareness is moderate to low.”

Nevada is farther away from the main plate boundary dividing the Pacific and North American plates, but the state still gathers seismic strain over the decades that must be released in earthquake­s eventually. “The handle is turning, and the box is there — it’s just a matter of time before the jack-in-the-box pops out.”

The Reno area has an earthquake risk approachin­g that of San Francisco, DePolo said; Las Vegas’ risk is less, but still exists.

Faults in the basin Reno sits in are capable of generating quakes as big as magnitude 6.8; a larger fault in the Carson Valley just south of Reno could generate one as large as magnitude 7.4.

Just east of Las Vegas is Frenchman Mountain, and on the east side of the mountain lies an earthquake fault capable of producing an earthquake of possibly magnitude 6.7, DePolo said.

Ray is survived by three children and four grandchild­ren, according to KTNV-TV Channel 13 in Las Vegas. The station quoted his son as saying that Ray was hardworkin­g and loved to work on his cars.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times By Rong-Gong Lin II ?? CARMEN RIVERA walks in Ridgecrest, Calif., a day after the first earthquake. It is plausible that a car fell on a man from the shaking felt in Pahrump, Nev.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times By Rong-Gong Lin II CARMEN RIVERA walks in Ridgecrest, Calif., a day after the first earthquake. It is plausible that a car fell on a man from the shaking felt in Pahrump, Nev.

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