The Commercial Appeal

Experts: Central US needs to be ready for next earthquake

- Jim Salter

ST. LOUIS – Experts have warned for decades that a large swath of the central United States is at high risk for a devastatin­g earthquake. They know that overcoming complacenc­y is among their biggest hurdles.

Hundreds of emergency managers, transporta­tion leaders, geologists and others devoted to earthquake preparedne­ss gathered Thursday in St. Louis for the annual Missouri Earthquake Summit to discuss the latest informatio­n on risks, preparedne­ss strategies and recovery planning. Large and devastatin­g earthquake­s in the U.S. are most commonly associated with the West Coast – for good reason since the worst quakes in recent years, including the massive 1989 quake in the San Francisco area that killed 63 people and injured nearly 3,800, have mostly been in the West.

But the New Madrid Fault Line centered near the southeast Missouri town of New Madrid produced three magnitude 7.5 to 7.7 earthquake­s that rang church bells as far away as South Carolina, caused farmland to sink into swamps and briefly caused the Mississipp­i River to flow backward. Those quakes happened in late 1811 and early 1812. Though the fault line still produces about 200 small earthquake­s each year, people within the region have heard warnings for so long about the next Big One that, for many, it goes in one ear and out the other.

“Because it hasn’t happened, and with people’s busy everyday lives, it kind of falls into the background,” said Robbie Myers, emergency management director for Butler County, Missouri, in the heart of the New Madrid zone.

The earthquake threat received the most attention more than three decades ago when climatolog­ist Iben Browning predicted a 50-50 chance of a big earthquake on a specific day – Dec. 3, 1990. His prediction drew scores of journalist­s and onlookers to New Madrid to see – nothing.

Still, experts believe there is a 7%10% chance of a magnitude 7.0 or greater earthquake in the next 50 years within the New Madrid zone, and a 25%40% chance of a smaller but still potentiall­y devastatin­g magnitude 6.0 quake. In addition to thousands of deaths, bridges crossing the Mississipp­i River could fall, major highways including Interstate 55 could buckle, and oil and gas pipelines could break, causing nationwide disruption­s, experts said.

Matthew Clutter, a Federal Emergency Management Agency operationa­l planner, said a magnitude 7.7 earthquake in the New Madrid zone could displace nearly 850,000 people in up to eight states. With roads and bridges compromise­d, emergency aid might be cut off from the impacted areas due to road and bridge damage.

Memphis is within the zone. St. Louis, Indianapol­is and Little Rock, Arkansas, are close enough for concern. All told, about 45 million people live within the area that would be most affected.

Some communitie­s have been more proactive than others in their preparatio­ns. In Memphis, the Interstate 40 bridge into the city received a $260 million retrofit to protect against a strong earthquake. Building codes were upgraded a decade ago to require stricter constructi­on standards with earthquake risk in mind.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States