The type and quality of construction has a tremendous effect on what happens during an earthquake. Damage and fatalities are directly affected by the construction in an earthquake. For example, many more people died in the 1988 Armenia earthquake, where people live in mud houses, than in the 1989 earthquake in Loma Prieta. Most buildings in California’s earthquake country are designed to be earthquake-safe.
We know that earthquakes kill lots of people. However, the ground shaking almost never kills people, and the ground does not swallow someone up. Fatalities depend somewhat on an earthquake's size and the type of ground people inhabit. But much of what determines the number of fatalities depends on the quality of structures. People are killed when structures fall on them. More damage is done and more people are killed by the fires that follow an earthquake than the earthquake itself.
A landslide in a neighborhood in Anchorage, Alaska, after the 1964 Great Alaska earthquake.
Liquefaction of sediments in Mexico City caused the collapse of many buildings in the 1985 earthquake.
In earthquake-prone areas, city planners try to reduce hazards. For example, in the San Francisco Bay Area, maps show how much shaking is expected for different ground types (Figure below). This allows planners to locate new hospitals and schools more safely.
The expected Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale for an earthquake of magnitude 7.1 on the northern portion of the Hayward Fault.
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| Image | Reference | Attributions |
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| License: CC BY-NC | ||
| Credit: Courtesy of US Geological Survey Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AlaskaQuake-Turnagain.jpg License: Public Domain | ||
| Credit: Courtesy of I.D. Celebi, US Geological Survey Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MexCity85quake.jpg License: Public Domain | ||
| Credit: Courtesy of Association of Bay Area Governments Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:RogersCrkNorthHayward.gif License: Public Domain |
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