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EARTHQUAKE
Produced by the National Disaster Education
Coalition:
American Red Cross, FEMA, IAEM, IBHS, NFPA, NWS, USDA/CSREES,
and USGS. |
Why Talk About Earthquakes?
Earthquakes strike suddenly, without warning. Earthquakes
can occur at any time of the year and at any time of the day or
night. On a yearly basis, 70 to 75 damaging earthquakes occur
throughout the world. Estimates of losses from a future earthquake
in the United States approach $200 billion.
There are 41 states and territories in the United States at
moderate to high risk from earthquakes, and they are located in
every region of the country. California experiences the most
frequent damaging earthquakes; however, Alaska experiences the
greatest number of large earthquakes-most located in uninhabited
areas. The largest earthquakes felt in the United States were along
the New Madrid Fault in Missouri, where a three-month long series of
quakes from 1811 to 1812 included three quakes larger than a
magnitude of 8 on the Richter Scale. These earthquakes were felt
over the entire Eastern United States, with Missouri, Tennessee,
Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Alabama, Arkansas, and
Mississippi experiencing the strongest ground shaking.
There are 41
states and territories in the United States at moderate to high risk
from earthquakes, and they are located in every region of the
country.
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What Are Earthquakes, and What Causes Them?
An earthquake is a sudden, rapid shaking of the Earth caused by
the breaking and shifting of rock beneath the Earth's surface. For
hundreds of millions of years, the forces of plate tectonics have
shaped the Earth as the huge plates that form the Earth's surface
move slowly over, under, and past each other. Sometimes the movement
is gradual. At other times, the plates are locked together, unable
to release the accumulating energy. When the accumulated energy
grows strong enough, the plates break free causing the ground to
shake. Most earthquakes occur at the boundaries where the plates
meet; however, some earthquakes occur in the middle of plates.
Ground shaking from earthquakes can collapse buildings and
bridges; disrupt gas, electric, and phone service; and sometimes
trigger landslides, avalanches, flash floods, fires, and huge,
destructive ocean waves (tsunamis). Buildings with foundations
resting on unconsolidated landfill and other unstable soil, and
trailers and homes not tied to their foundations are at risk because
they can be shaken off their mountings during an earthquake. When an
earthquake occurs in a populated area, it may cause deaths and
injuries and extensive property damage.
The Northridge, California, earthquake of January 17, 1994,
struck a modern urban environment generally designed to withstand
the forces of earthquakes. Its economic cost, nevertheless, has been
estimated at $20 billion. Fortunately, relatively few lives were
lost. Exactly one year later, Kobe, Japan, a densely populated
community less prepared for earthquakes than Northridge, was
devastated by the most costly earthquake ever to occur. Property
losses were projected at $96 billion, and at least 5,378 people were
killed. These two earthquakes tested building codes and construction
practices, as well as emergency preparedness and response
procedures.
Where earthquakes have occurred in the past, they will happen
again. Learn whether earthquakes are a risk in your area by
contacting the
Brownsville Office of Emergency Management, your local emergency
management office,
American Red Cross chapter, state geological survey, or
department of natural resources.
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Awareness Information
Expect aftershocks.
Aftershocks are smaller earthquakes that follow the main shock and
can cause further damage to weakened buildings. After-shocks can
occur in the first hours, days, weeks, or even months after the
quake. Be aware that some earthquakes are actually foreshocks, and a
larger earthquake might occur.
Ground movement during an earthquake is seldom the direct
cause of death or injury. Most earthquake-related injuries result
from collapsing walls, flying glass, and falling objects as a result
of the ground shaking, or people trying to move more than a few feet
during the shaking. Much of the damage in earthquakes is
predictable and preventable. We must all work together in our
communities to apply our knowledge to building codes, retrofitting
programs, hazard hunts, and neighborhood and family emergency plans.
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Plan for an Earthquake
Develop a Family Disaster Plan.
Please see the "Family
Disaster Plan" section for general family planning information.
Develop earthquake-specific planning. Learn
about earthquake risk in your area. Contact your local
emergency management office, American Red Cross chapter, state
geological survey, or department of natural resources for historical
information and earthquake preparedness for your area. Although
there are 41 states or territories at moderate to high risk, many
people do not realize the potential for earthquakes in their area.
If you are at risk from earthquakes:
- Pick "safe places" in
each room of your home. A safe place could be under a
sturdy table or desk or against an interior wall away from
windows, bookcases, or tall furniture that could fall on you. The
shorter the distance to move to safety, the less likely you will
be injured. Injury statistics show that persons moving more than
10 feet during an earthquake's shaking are most likely to
experience injury.
- Practice drop, cover,
and hold-on in each safe place. Drop under a sturdy
desk or table, hold on, and protect your eyes by pressing your
face against your arm. Practicing will make these actions an
automatic response. When an earthquake or other disaster occurs,
many people hesitate, trying to remember what they are supposed to
do. Responding quickly and automatically may help protect you from
injury.
- Practice drop, cover,
and hold-on at least twice a year. Frequent practice
will help reinforce safe behavior.
- Talk with your
insurance agent. Different areas have different
requirements for earthquake protection. Study locations of active
faults, and if you are at risk, consider purchasing earthquake
insurance.
- Inform guests,
babysitters, and caregivers of your plan. Everyone in
your home should know what to do if an earthquake occurs. Assure
yourself that others will respond properly even if you are not at
home during the earthquake.
- Get training.
Take a first aid class from your local Red Cross chapter. Get
training on how to use a fire extinguisher from your local fire
department. Keep your training current. Training will help you to
keep calm and know what to do when an earthquake occurs.
- Discuss earthquakes
with your family. Everyone should know what to do in
case all family members are not together. Discussing earthquakes
ahead of time helps reduce fear and anxiety and lets everyone know
how to respond.
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What to Tell Children
- Find safe places in
every room of your home and your classroom. Look for safe
places inside and outside of other buildings where you spend time.
The shorter the distance you have to travel when the ground
shakes, the safer you will be. Earthquakes can happen anytime and
anywhere, so be prepared wherever you go.
- If you're indoors
during an earthquake, drop, cover, and hold on. Get
under a desk, table or bench. Hold on to one of the legs and cover
your eyes. If there's no table or desk nearby, sit down against an
interior wall. An interior wall is less likely to collapse than a
wall on the outside shell of the building. Pick a safe place where
things will not fall on you, away from windows, bookcases, or
tall, heavy furniture. It is dangerous to run outside when an
earthquake happens because bricks, roofing, and other materials
may fall from buildings during and immediately following
earthquakes, injuring persons near the buildings.
- Wait in your safe
place until the shaking stops, then check to see if you are hurt.
You will be better able to help others if you take care of
yourself first, then check the people around you. Move carefully
and watch out for things that have fallen or broken, creating
hazards. Be ready for additional earthquakes called "aftershocks."
- Be on the lookout for
fires. Fire is the most common earthquake-related
hazard, due to broken gas lines, damaged electrical lines or
appliances, and previously contained fires or sparks being
released.
- If you must leave a
building after the shaking stops, use the stairs, not the
elevator. Earthquakes can cause fire alarms and fire
sprinklers to go off. You will not be certain whether there is a
real threat of fire. As a precaution, use the stairs.
- If you're outside in
an earthquake, stay outside. Move away from buildings, trees,
streetlights, and power lines. Crouch down and cover your head.
Many injuries occur within 10 feet of the entrance to buildings.
Bricks, roofing, and other materials can fall from buildings,
injuring persons nearby. Trees, streetlights, and power lines may
also fall, causing damage or injury.
Assemble a
Disaster Supplies Kit!
Please see the
"Disaster Supplies Kit"
section for general supplies kit information. Earthquake-specific
supplies should include the following:
- A flashlight and sturdy
shoes by each person's bedside.
- Disaster Supplies Kit
basics
- Evacuation Supply Kit.
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How to Protect Your Property
- Bolt bookcases, china
cabinets, and other tall furniture to wall studs. Brace or
anchor high or top-heavy objects. During an earthquake,
these items can fall over, causing damage or injury.
- Secure items that
might fall (televisions, books, computers, etc.).
Falling items can cause damage or injury.
- Install strong latches
or bolts on cabinets. The contents of cabinets can
shift during the shaking of an earthquake. Latches will prevent
cabinets from flying open and contents from falling out.
- Move large or heavy
objects and fragile items (glass or china) to lower shelves.
There will be less damage and less chance of injury if these items
are on lower shelves.
- Store breakable items
such as bottled foods, glass, and china in low, closed cabinets
with latches. Latches will help keep contents of
cabinets inside.
- Store weed killers,
pesticides, and flammable products securely in closed cabinets
with latches, on bottom shelves. Chemical products will
be less likely to create hazardous situations from lower, confined
locations.
- Hang heavy items, such
as pictures and mirrors, away from beds, couches, and anywhere
people sit. Earthquakes can knock things off walls,
causing damage or injury.
- Brace overhead light
fixtures. During earthquakes, overhead light fixtures
are the most common items to fall, causing damage or injury.
- Strap the water heater
to wall studs. The water heater may be your best source
of drinkable water following an earthquake. Protect it from damage
and leaks.
- Bolt down any gas
appliances. After an earthquake, broken gas lines
frequently create fire hazards.
- Install flexible pipe
fittings to avoid gas or water leaks. Flexible fittings
will be less likely to break.
- Repair any deep cracks
in ceilings or foundations. Get expert advice if there are
signs of structural defects. Earthquakes can turn cracks
into ruptures and make smaller problems bigger.
- Check to see if your
house is bolted to its foundation. Homes bolted to
their foundations are less likely to be severely damaged during
earthquakes. Homes that are not bolted have been known to slide
off their foundations, and many have been destroyed because they
are uninhabitable.
- Consider having your
building evaluated by a professional structural design engineer.
Ask about home repair and strengthening tips for exterior
features, such as porches, front and back decks, sliding glass
doors, canopies, carports, and garage doors. Learn about
additional ways you can protect your home. A professional can give
you advice on how to reduce potential damage.
- Follow local seismic building standards and
safe land use codes that regulate land use along fault lines.
Some municipalities, counties, and states have enacted codes and
standards to protect property and occupants. Learn about your
area's codes before construction.
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Media and Community
Education Ideas
- Ask your community to develop stronger
building codes. Building codes are the public's first line of
defense against earthquakes. The codes specify the levels of
earthquake forces that structures must be designed to withstand.
As ground motions of greater intensity have been recorded, the
minimum earthquake requirements specified in building codes have
been raised.
- Publish a special section in your local
newspaper with emergency information on earthquakes. Localize the
information by printing the phone numbers of local emergency
services offices, the American Red Cross, and hospitals.
- Conduct a week-long newspaper series on
locating hazards in the home.
- Work with local emergency services and
American Red Cross officials to prepare special reports for people
with mobility impairments about what to do during an earthquake.
- Provide tips on conducting earthquake drills
in the home.
- Interview representatives of the gas,
electric, and water companies about shutting off utilities.
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What to Do During an
Earthquake
- Drop, cover, and hold
on! Move only a few steps to a nearby safe place. Most
injured persons in earthquakes move more than five feet during the
shaking. It is very dangerous to try to leave a building during an
earthquake because objects can fall on you. Many fatalities occur
when people run outside of buildings, only to be killed by falling
debris from collapsing walls. In U.S. buildings, you are safer to
stay where you are.
- If you are in bed,
hold on and stay there, protecting your head with a pillow.
You are less likely to be injured staying where you are. Broken
glass on the floor has caused injury to those who have rolled to
the floor or tried to get to doorways.
- If you are outdoors,
find a clear spot away from buildings, trees, streetlights, and
power lines. Drop to the ground and stay there until the
shaking stops. Injuries can occur from falling trees,
street-lights and power lines, or building debris.
- If you are in a
vehicle, pull over to a clear location, stop and stay there with
your seatbelt fastened until the shaking has stopped.
Trees, power lines, poles, street signs, and other overhead items
may fall during earthquakes. Stopping will help reduce your risk,
and a hard-topped vehicle will help protect you from flying or
falling objects. Once the shaking has stopped, proceed with
caution. Avoid bridges or ramps that might have been damaged by
the quake.
- Stay indoors until the
shaking stops and you're sure it's safe to exit. More
injuries happen when people move during the shaking of an
earthquake. After the shaking has stopped, if you go outside, move
quickly away from the building to prevent injury from falling
debris.
- Stay away from
windows. Windows can shatter with such force that you
can be injured several feet away.
- In a high-rise
building, expect the fire alarms and sprinklers to go off during a
quake. Earthquakes frequently cause fire alarm and fire
sprinkler systems to go off even if there is no fire. Check for
and extinguish small fires, and, if exiting, use the stairs.
- If you are in a
coastal area, move to higher ground. Tsunamis are often
created by earthquakes. (See the
"Tsunami"
section for more information).
- If you are in a
mountainous area or near unstable slopes or cliffs, be alert for
falling rocks and other debris that could be loosened by the
earthquake. Landslides commonly happen after
earthquakes.
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What to Do After an
Earthquake
- Check yourself for
injuries. Often people tend to others without checking
their own injuries. You will be better able to care for others if
you are not injured or if you have received first aid for your
injuries.
- Protect yourself from
further danger by putting on long pants, a long-sleeved shirt,
sturdy shoes, and work gloves. This will protect your
from further injury by broken objects.
- After you have taken
care of yourself, help injured or trapped persons. If
you have it in your area, call 9-1-1, then give first aid when
appropriate. Don't try to move seriously injured people unless
they are in immediate danger of further injury.
- Look for and
extinguish small fires. Eliminate fire hazards. Putting
out small fires quickly, using available resources, will prevent
them from spreading. Fire is the most common hazard following
earthquakes. Fires followed the San Francisco earthquake of 1906
for three days, creating more damage than the earthquake.
- Leave the gas on at
the main valve, unless you smell gas or think it's leaking.
It may be weeks or months before professionals can turn gas back
on using the correct procedures. Explosions have caused injury and
death when homeowners have improperly turned their gas back on by
themselves.
- Clean up spilled
medicines, bleaches, gasoline, or other flammable liquids
immediately. Avoid the hazard of a chemical emergency.
- Open closet and
cabinet doors cautiously. Contents may have shifted
during the shaking of an earthquake and could fall, creating
further damage or injury.
- Inspect your home for
damage. Get everyone out if your home is unsafe.
Aftershocks following earthquakes can cause further damage to
unstable buildings. If your home has experienced damage, get out
before aftershocks happen.
- Help neighbors who may
require special assistance. Elderly people and people
with disabilities may require additional assistance. People who
care for them or who have large families may need additional
assistance in emergency situations.
- Listen to a portable,
battery-operated radio (or television) for updated emergency
information and instructions. If the electricity is
out, this may be your main source of information. Local radio and
local officials provide the most appropriate advice for your
particular situation.
- Expect aftershocks.
Each time you feel one, drop, cover, and hold on! Aftershocks
frequently occur minutes, days, weeks, and even months following
an earthquake.
- Watch out for fallen
power lines or broken gas lines, and stay out of damaged areas.
Hazards caused by earthquakes are often difficult to see, and you
could be easily injured.
- Stay out of damaged
buildings. If you are away from home, return only when
authorities say it is safe. Damaged buildings may be destroyed by
aftershocks following the main quake.
- Use battery-powered
lanterns or flashlights to inspect your home. Kerosene
lanterns, torches, candles, and matches may tip over or ignite
flammables inside.
- Inspect the entire
length of chimneys carefully for damage. Unnoticed
damage could lead to fire or injury from falling debris during an
aftershock. Cracks in chimneys can be the cause of a fire years
later.
- Take pictures of the
damage, both to the house and its contents, for insurance claims.
- Avoid smoking inside
buildings. Smoking in confined areas can cause fires.
- When entering
buildings, use extreme caution. Building damage may
have occurred where you least expect it. Carefully watch every
step you take.
- Examine walls, floor,
doors, staircases, and windows to make sure that the building is
not in danger of collapsing.
- Check for gas leaks.
If you smell gas or hear a blowing or hissing noise, open a
window and quickly leave the building. Turn off the gas, using
the outside main valve if you can, and call the gas company from
a neighbor's home. If you turn off the gas for any reason, it
must be turned back on by a professional.
- Look for electrical
system damage. If you see sparks or broken or frayed
wires, or if you smell burning insulation, turn off the
electricity at the main fuse box or circuit breaker. If you have
to step in water to get to the fuse box or circuit breaker, call
an electrician first for advice.
- Check for sewage and
water line damage. If you suspect sewage lines are
damaged, avoid using the toilets and call a plumber. If water
pipes are damaged, contact the water company and avoid using
water from the tap. You can obtain safe water from undamaged
water heaters or by melting ice cubes.
- Watch for loose
plaster, drywall, and ceilings that could fall.
- Use the telephone only
to report life-threatening emergencies. Telephone lines
are frequently overwhelmed in disaster situations. They need to be
clear for emergency calls to get through.
- Watch animals closely.
Leash dogs and place them in a fenced yard. The behavior of
pets may change dramatically after an earthquake. Normally quiet
and friendly cats and dogs may become aggressive or defensive.
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