The Guardian (USA)

Seconds before a 6.2 earthquake rattled California, phones got a vital warning

- Gabrielle Canon

In the moments before a 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck the northern California coast on Monday, roughly half a million phones began to buzz. An early-alert system managed by the US Geological Survey sent warnings out before the ground started to shake, giving residents in the sparsely populated area vital time to take cover.

The earthquake brought significan­t shaking but minimal damage in Humboldt county, about 210 miles northwest of San Francisco, and officials said it was an excellent test of the alert-system. It was the largest magnitude quake that’s occurred since the system, known as ShakeAlert, was officially rolled out across the west coast.

“We got some reports from folks that they got up to 10 seconds’ warning before they felt shaking. That’s pretty darn good,” said Robert de Groot, a ShakeAlert coordinato­r with the USGS.

ShakeAlert issues warnings through a series of agencies and apps including the MyShakeApp, public wireless emergency alert systems, and the Android operating system, powered by Google. A data package is created from informatio­n provided by USGS sensors and – within seconds – shows up on phones. Some apps that provide alerts are available to download but even some who didn’t have an app on their phone were notified. Affected individual­s are instructed to drop, cover, and hold on. Having extra seconds to do so can save lives.

This event provided an opportunit­y for the scientists and system operators to test and improve ShakeAlert so it will be even better when the next big earthquake strikes. “We can run as many simulation­s and tests as possible but we are really going to learn the most from real earthquake­s,” de Groot said. “It’s giving us the chance to use the system and learn how to do a better job of alerting people.”

The earthquake occurred just after noon and was centered off the coast, near a tiny town called Petrolia that’s home to fewer than 1,000 people. The nearest population center, Eureka, is about 45 miles north.

That left only about 25,000 people in the range of strong or very strong shaking, according to the US Geological Survey, though residents as far away as Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay Area reported feeling trembling.

The Humboldt county sheriff’s office of emergency services did not issue any evacuation orders, though a few roads were closed due to rockslides. The US Geological Survey estimated economic losses of less than $10m and no fatalities.

Photos showed shattered store windows, broken bottles fallen into store aisles and tiles that had fallen loose from a commercial building’s ceiling. The area last suffered an earthquake of a similar magnitude in 1993, when one person died, according to the USGS.

Jane Dexter, manager of the Petrolia General Store, told the San Francisco Chronicle the rumbling and shaking had lasted for about 20 seconds. Glass bottles fell off the shelves at the store, bursting on the floor, but no one was hurt, she said.

“It was bigger than [anything] I’ve felt in a long time out here,” she told the Chronicle.

There have been dozens of aftershock­s ranging from 2.6 to 4.5 in magnitude, according to the USGS, through Monday and Tuesday. Though the quake originated off the coast, it did not trigger a tsunami and the National Weather Service announced that there was not a threat of one.

Even as alerts improve, officials emphasized how essential it is for residents and visitors to earthquake-prone areas across the west coast to be prepared. “It is one tool in a larger toolbox,” said De Groot. Everyone should have an emergency earthquake kit, copies of important documents, and plenty of bottled water for each person in the household. “[ShakeAlert] is just an enhancemen­t for them to use to keep safe.”

 ?? Photograph: Reed Saxon/ AP ?? Dr Lucy Jones, a seismologi­st, describes how an early warning system would work at a news conference in 2013.
Photograph: Reed Saxon/ AP Dr Lucy Jones, a seismologi­st, describes how an early warning system would work at a news conference in 2013.

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