The USGS has produced a new series of earthquake hazard maps for
the City of Seattle. These 'urban seismic hazard' maps provide a much
higher-resolution view of the potential for strong earthquake shaking than
previously available. This new view is particularly important for
Seattle, which sits atop a sedimentary basin that strongly affects the
patterns of earthquake ground shaking and therefore, of potential
damage. These new hazards maps incorporate shaking effects not captured
in the National Seismic Hazard Maps, which include:
- The subsurface geologic structure of the Seattle basin and
its environs can amplify and lengthen the duration of strong shaking in
some places. The seismic waves that shake the ground may be focused and
diffused by the shape of materials within subsurface geologic
structures.
- Surficial and shallow deposits of artificial fill and young
alluvium (river deposits) may strongly amplify earthquake waves.
- The earthquake rupture process can also cause higher ground
shaking in certain directions from a fault. A large earthquake grows like
a propagating crack, radiating seismic waves along the way. This can lead
to a pile-up of wave energy in front of the fault and spread it out
behind.
The new Seattle Urban Seismic Hazard Maps include all of these effects.
They are based on 540 computer simulations of earthquakes in a
three-dimensional model of the Earth's crust.
Click
here if you would like to read more about the hazard map or download
the map from the USGS.
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