Submitted by Steve on Tue, 04/09/2013 - 10:46
Have you ever visited Venice
Italy? From a geophysical perspective (Is there any other?), Venice has a
curious attribute. Certain times of the year the city endures Acqua Alta – high water- when the sea
rises up and floods the lowest areas of town. City workers dutifully unpack and
set up wooden walkways so folks can get about the place without wet feet.
Cafe owners construct temporary platforms in front of their shops tempting tourists to partake coffee and biscotti whilst high and dry. In a few days the flood
Submitted by Steve on Mon, 03/18/2013 - 12:24
Not likely that you’ve ever
thought much about Gulf of Mexico tsunami. Seeing that most tsunami birth from
large earthquakes, and that the Gulf hosts only smallish ones, your lack of
concern is justified. Still, things other than quakes cause tsunami --
submarine landslides for one.
Submitted by john on Sat, 03/16/2013 - 19:51
You can find my presentation to the Association of Pacific Rim Universities Senior Staff meeting at Waseda University in Tokyo, Japan on March 7, here. Professor Yuichi Ono of Tohoku University gave a nice presentation of the Multihazards Initiative and the hub Institute at Tohoku University. His presentation can be found here.
Submitted by john on Fri, 03/15/2013 - 21:34
Presented a summary of partnering opportunities at the senior staff meeting of the Association of Pacific Rim Universities, Tokyo, Japan, held at Waseda University on thursday March 7. Then over to the US Embassy, Tokyo, to inform staffers there of the summer school to be conducted at Tohoku University in July (?) 2013. Summer school will be for administrators and policy makers as planned at this time. A field trip to the tsunami inundation area will also be held. A great time and place to learn about disasters and what we can do about them.
Submitted by john on Sat, 03/02/2013 - 09:58
This morning I got up at 5:00 am to drive down to San Francisco to catch a flight to Tokyo on my way to Sendai, Japan. The Association of Pacific Rim Universities (APRU), an organization of the 42 leading universities around the Pacific Rim, are meeting next week in Tokyo to, in part, approve the plan to move ahead with the APRU MultiHazards Initiative. To be headquartered at Tohoku University, the idea is to bring together the leading minds around the Pacific Rim to partner in the solution of problems relating to great disasters such as the March 11, 201
Submitted by Steve on Fri, 02/22/2013 - 11:26
Have you read about that meteor
that blew up over Russia a few days ago? Amazing. A rock
from space hasn’t caused serious damage and human injury since --- I don’t know -- the days of Christopher
Columbus. True, a similar but bigger meteor exploded over Siberia in 1908, but
that area was virtually uninhabited.
Submitted by john on Mon, 02/18/2013 - 19:26
Plans are afoot to produce lesson plans for educational purposes involving earthquakes and other natural hazards. As a simple example, I posted a set of slides on the gallery section of this web site. You can find them here or you can find them through the galleries. They can be easily downloaded for use as needed.
Submitted by john on Thu, 02/14/2013 - 20:49
A colleague just sent along a link to a web site that plans to preserve the history and personal stories associated with the September 4, 2010 M7.1 Christchurch NZ earthquake, and the February 22, 2011 M6.3 Canterbury, NZ earthquake. You can find the link here. An excellent way to preserve knowledge about these events and may well aid in helping to prevent similar disasters in the future.
Submitted by john on Wed, 02/13/2013 - 10:48
Now its easier than ever to make a forecast for your location. Just go to the "Personal Earthquake Forecast" on the Tools tab, or go here. Enter the location where you want to make the forecast. Click on "Go". That's all.
Submitted by john on Fri, 02/08/2013 - 19:55
One of the advantages of hindsight is that what seemed obscure in the past becomes obvious (here I recommend Duncan Watt's NY Times bestseller: "Everything is Obvious Once You Know the Answer"). We can see an example of this in the earthquake forecast that we run on this web site. The NTW method, upon which the global forecast is based, was first developed and published in the peer reviewed literature [1] as a regional forecast over areas the size of California + Nevada. An assumption implicit in this approach is that earthquakes o
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