Monday, December 26, 2016

Reflections of 2004: Are you Prepared?

              Twelve years ago, as American kids were marveling at their new gifts they had received the day before, the earth jolted.
               Twelve years ago, as family members hugged goodbye, and planes were being boarded for the journey home. The ocean roared.
               Twelve years ago, as the rest of the world settled for a relaxing Boxing Day, the Indian Ocean Basin experienced an apocalypse.
               A section of the seabed over 800 miles long jerked to the west and upward in a titanic 9.2 magnitude earthquake that shook the countries of Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Singapore and the Maldives. Massive shockwaves rocked the ground for up to 10 minutes. People were thrown to the ground, buildings collapsed, sand boiled up like water from cracks. And that wasn’t the end.
               As soon as 15 minutes following the earthquake, tsunami waves up to 80 feet high careened into the coastlines, leaving a wake of death and destruction which took the lives of over 250,000 people around the Indian Ocean coast. It is one of the deadliest natural disasters in written history. And it wasn’t just a freak event.

The 2004 tsunami crashes to shore. Photo by Wikipedia. 

               In 2010, a magnitude 8.8 earthquake and resulting tsunami devastated the coast of south-central Chile. And in 2011, the northeast coast of Japan was ravaged by a 9.1 magnitude earthquake and massive tsunami which leveled entire towns. And in 2014 and 2015, Chile experienced an 8.0 earthquake which caused widespread damage each time.
               The twenty-first century is beginning to intimately introduce us to Megathrust Earthquakes. Huge events on Subduction Zones that can wreak havoc across half the planet. And while many countries around the world have experienced this cataclysm, the Cascadia Subduction Zone off our coast remains quiet.
               You’ve heard the spiel before, we’ve all read the New Yorker’s Post. So, I won’t go into the nitty gritty details of what nightmare fuel is waiting for us in our possibly near future (some seismologists put us at a 1/3 chance within the next 30 years). All I ask of you today, on the anniversary of the deadliest event of this kind is: Are you prepared? If not, here’s a couple links of how you could prepare for an earthquake in our area. Stay safe.

Ready to go.

Red Cross

FEMA Earthquake Checklist





           






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