The Denver Post

A WARNING FOR EARTHQUAKE­S?

With latest temblors, West Coast looks at alert system.

- By John Antczak and Christophe­r Weber

The powerful Mojave Desert earthquake­s that rocked California ended a years-long lull in major seismic activity and raised new interest in an early warning system being developed for the West Coast.

The ShakeAlert system is substantia­lly built in California and overall is about 55% complete, with much of the remaining installati­on of seismic sensor stations to be done in the Pacific Northwest, said Robert de Groot of the U.S. Geological Survey.

Areas that have the appropriat­e number of sensors include Southern California, San Francisco Bay Area and the Seattle-Tacoma region, de Groot said.

The system does not predict earthquake­s. Rather, it detects that an earthquake is oc

curring, rapidly calculates expected intensity levels and sends out alerts that may give warnings ranging from several seconds to perhaps a minute before potentiall­y damaging shaking hits away from the epicenter.

Depending on the distance, that could be enough time to automatica­lly slow trains, stop industrial machines, start generators, pull a surgical knife away from a patient or tell students to put the “drop, cover and hold” drill into action.

For alerts to be useful, delivery has to be timely, and that’s a problem with current cellphone technology. For cellphone delivery, the USGS ultimately intends to use the same system that delivers Amber Alerts, sending signals to everyone in reach of cellphone towers in defined areas where damaging shaking is expected.

Pilot programs involving select users have been underway for several years. In October, the USGS announced the system was ready to be used broadly by businesses, utilities, schools and other entities following a software update that reduced problems such as false alerts typically caused by a big quake somewhere in the world being misidentif­ied as a local quake.

Currently, the only mass public notificati­on is possible through a mobile app developed for the city of Los Angeles and functional only within Los Angeles County.

The ShakeAlert­LA app did not send alerts for last week’s two big quakes, but officials said it functioned as designed because the expected level of shaking in the LA area — more than 100 miles from the epicenters— was below a trigger threshold.

In the Mojave Desert on Monday, rattled residents cleaned up and officials assessed damage in the aftermath of Thursday’s magnitude 6.4 earthquake and Friday’s magnitude 7.1 quake centered near Ridgecrest.

It could be several more days before water service is restored to the small town of Trona, where officials trucked in portable toilets and showers, said San Bernardino County spokesman David Wert.

 ?? Robyn Beck, AFP/Getty Images ?? Terry Brantley looks at his neighbor's home after it burnt down in an electrical fire following a magnitude 7.1 earthquake in Ridgecrest, Calif., on July 6. Brantley said he and his wife had spent the day cleaning up from the 6.4 quake on July 4 when the July 5 quake hit, severely damaging their home.
Robyn Beck, AFP/Getty Images Terry Brantley looks at his neighbor's home after it burnt down in an electrical fire following a magnitude 7.1 earthquake in Ridgecrest, Calif., on July 6. Brantley said he and his wife had spent the day cleaning up from the 6.4 quake on July 4 when the July 5 quake hit, severely damaging their home.

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