Hidden Fury
 
									- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
The New Madrid earthquake zone, located along the Mississippi River near Memphis, Tennessee, has received little attention in recent years. But in 1811 it was the site of the most powerful series of earthquakes ever known on earth. Some two million square miles were affected, and shocks were felt as far away as Montreal, Canada - 1,200 miles from the epicenter.
According to experts, another major earthquake will likely occur in the New Madrid Earthquake Zone in the next 50 years. With the aid of computer graphics, the geologic characteristics of the region and the tectonic nature of earthquakes are explained. Additionally, the relatively stable region of the central United States is compared to the well-known seismicity of California. This is a fascinating science adventure that, for many people, will hit very close to home.
'Interesting, easy to follow, full of good information, and well illustrated with high-quality computer graphics and live-action footage...effective in any historical geology or tectonics class to show how the understanding of ancient tectonic history can elucidate issues that face modern society.' ***** Journal of Geological Education
'Smoothly edited into a vibrant, coherent, accessible whole with an excellent balance of interviews to visuals. Highly recommended for classroom use in earth science courses and for the general public.' **** Video Rating Guide
'Explains the geologic origins of earthquakes, cites the difficulties of predicting action along the New Madrid Fault, and calmly alerts viewers to a hidden threat.' Booklist
Citation
Main credits
								Prose, Doug V. (screenwriter)
Prose, Doug V. (film producer)
Wescott, Don (narrator)
							
Other credits
Edited by Laurie Schmidt; cinematography, Doug Prose; original music by Doug Prose, Mel Von Kriegenbergh, Ed Goldfarb; scientific advisor, Dr. Kaye Shedlock.
Distributor subjects
Earth Science; Geology; Plate Tectonics; American Studies; GeographyKeywords
WEBVTT
 
 00:00:10.000 --> 00:00:14.999
 [music]
 
 00:00:15.000 --> 00:00:19.999
 Memphis, Tennessee. On the far
 side of the Mississippi River,
 
 00:00:20.000 --> 00:00:24.999
 the land smooth\'s out in a broad level
 plane. Below this veneer of rich farmland,
 
 00:00:25.000 --> 00:00:29.999
 one of the planet\'s most powerful
 earthquake zones lies hidden.
 
 00:00:30.000 --> 00:00:34.999
 In recent history, the Earth is trembled
 off from here but really enough to cause
 
 00:00:35.000 --> 00:00:39.999
 serious damage. So there hasn\'t
 been much concern for earthquakes.
 
 00:00:40.000 --> 00:00:44.999
 The population has grown to over 10 million people
 in the region, and most development took place
 
 00:00:45.000 --> 00:00:49.999
 with no regard for earthquake safety.
 The earthquake zone lies buried
 
 00:00:50.000 --> 00:00:54.999
 in the heart of America. It trends along the
 Mississippi River between Marked tree, Arkansas
 
 00:00:55.000 --> 00:00:59.999
 and Cairo, Illinois. Scientists call
 it the New Madrid Seismic Zone,
 
 00:01:00.000 --> 00:01:04.999
 named after a small town in Southern Missouri.
 This is not the original town we see here.
 
 00:01:05.000 --> 00:01:09.999
 The first one vanished in 1812 when
 the strongest series of earthquakes
 
 00:01:10.000 --> 00:01:14.999
 ever known on earth tore the region apart.
 
 00:01:15.000 --> 00:01:19.999
 That was a longtime ago, but scientific evidence
 shows that the New Madrid earthquake zone
 
 00:01:20.000 --> 00:01:25.000
 is still very much alive.
 
 00:01:30.000 --> 00:01:34.999
 On a clear winter night, the sky above the earthquake
 zone lit up with what looked like lightning.
 
 00:01:35.000 --> 00:01:39.999
 Below, a massive temblor with a magnitude
 of eight or higher struck near Marked Tree.
 
 00:01:40.000 --> 00:01:44.999
 A month later, another jolt as strong
 as the first struck near New Madrid.
 
 00:01:45.000 --> 00:01:49.999
 Incredibly, a third great
 quake, the strongest yet,
 
 00:01:50.000 --> 00:01:54.999
 rocked the area just 15 days later. Between
 these shocks and for months afterward,
 
 00:01:55.000 --> 00:01:59.999
 the earth trembled constantly. \"Earthquakes
 were so frequent\", an observer wrote,
 
 00:02:00.000 --> 00:02:04.999
 \"The earth was in continual agitation,
 visibly waving as a gentle sea.\"
 
 00:02:05.000 --> 00:02:09.999
 The Mississippi River was profoundly
 disrupted by the earthquakes.
 
 00:02:10.000 --> 00:02:14.999
 There are stories in the 1811 earthquake that the
 very calm Mississippi River suddenly had rapids
 
 00:02:15.000 --> 00:02:19.999
 in several areas along it. If a
 (inaudible) crossing the river moves,
 
 00:02:20.000 --> 00:02:24.999
 if it throws up part of the river floor, you will have rapids, you
 will… And there were also stories that the river ran backwards
 
 00:02:25.000 --> 00:02:29.999
 in a few points. The eyewitness
 accounts from 1811 and 12
 
 00:02:30.000 --> 00:02:34.999
 indicate that the river was essentially
 unnavigable. There were vast amounts of
 
 00:02:35.000 --> 00:02:39.999
 down trees and debris floating in
 the river, the banks had caved,
 
 00:02:40.000 --> 00:02:44.999
 sandbars that used to be in one location, perhaps, sunk and others
 rose in other areas so that the entire character of the river
 
 00:02:45.000 --> 00:02:49.999
 was fundamentally different.
 
 00:02:50.000 --> 00:02:54.999
 The quakes caused large tracks of land to
 warp upward while other tracks sank down.
 
 00:02:55.000 --> 00:02:59.999
 Reelfoot Lake near New Madrid was created when
 the land heaved up and dammed a running creek.
 
 00:03:00.000 --> 00:03:04.999
 When it was all over, an
 area the size of Tennessee
 
 00:03:05.000 --> 00:03:09.999
 bore the effects of the earthquakes, buildings
 were damaged over an area as vast as
 
 00:03:10.000 --> 00:03:14.999
 the state of Texas.
 Eyewitness accounts span
 
 00:03:15.000 --> 00:03:19.999
 the entire nation east of the
 Mississippi River. St. Louis, Missouri,
 
 00:03:20.000 --> 00:03:24.999
 125 miles from New Madrid reported severe
 shaking, badly cracked stone building,
 
 00:03:25.000 --> 00:03:29.999
 and hundreds of chimneys thrown down.
 Similar reports came
 
 00:03:30.000 --> 00:03:34.999
 from the more distant city of
 Cincinnati, Ohio, 300 miles away.
 
 00:03:35.000 --> 00:03:39.999
 The quake seismic waves traveled right through
 the Appalachian Mountains to the East.
 
 00:03:40.000 --> 00:03:44.999
 They arrived forcefully on the Atlantic
 Coast, 600 miles from New Madrid.
 
 00:03:45.000 --> 00:03:49.999
 In Charleston, South Carolina, cracks
 opened in the mortar of stone buildings.
 
 00:03:50.000 --> 00:03:54.999
 The bells of St. Philip\'s Church rang out
 for a short time. Clock stopped working
 
 00:03:55.000 --> 00:03:59.999
 in the coastal city of Savannah, Georgia
 where four large shocks were felt.
 
 00:04:00.000 --> 00:04:04.999
 Furniture was tossed about in people\'s
 homes. Further yet from New Madrid,
 
 00:04:05.000 --> 00:04:09.999
 moving furniture woke residents of Washington
 DC who thought they were being robbed.
 
 00:04:10.000 --> 00:04:14.999
 Shaking interrupted an early morning meeting
 of Congress. The earthquakes were felt sharply
 
 00:04:15.000 --> 00:04:19.999
 as far south as New Orleans. The local
 newspapers reported little damage in the city.
 
 00:04:20.000 --> 00:04:24.999
 There was even a report of shaking
 from the state of Florida.
 
 00:04:25.000 --> 00:04:29.999
 To the North, at least, eight shocks were distinctly
 felt in Montreal, Canada, 1200 miles away.
 
 00:04:30.000 --> 00:04:34.999
 All in all, 2 million square miles,
 well over a half the United States
 
 00:04:35.000 --> 00:04:39.999
 was shaken by the New Madrid earthquakes.
 This is the largest area
 
 00:04:40.000 --> 00:04:44.999
 ever known to be affected by any
 earthquake anywhere on earth.
 
 00:04:45.000 --> 00:04:49.999
 [sil.]
 
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 The great San Francisco earthquake in 1906 matched
 the power of the strongest New Madrid shock.
 
 00:04:55.000 --> 00:04:59.999
 It had a Richter magnitude of 8.3,
 enough to devastate San Francisco.
 
 00:05:00.000 --> 00:05:04.999
 Beyond the city, the quake had a
 damage area of 12,000 square miles.
 
 00:05:05.000 --> 00:05:09.999
 That\'s 20 times smaller than the area of
 damage for the New Madrid earthquakes.
 
 00:05:10.000 --> 00:05:14.999
 Earthquakes are normally seen
 as a California concern.
 
 00:05:15.000 --> 00:05:19.999
 And while quakes are not as common
 in the New Madrid earthquake zone,
 
 00:05:20.000 --> 00:05:24.999
 their enormous damage areas put millions of
 people at risk in the Central United States.
 
 00:05:25.000 --> 00:05:29.999
 Damage areas are so large
 partly because of the zones
 
 00:05:30.000 --> 00:05:34.999
 relation to global plate tectonics.
 The zone lies at the core of
 
 00:05:35.000 --> 00:05:39.999
 the North American tectonic plate, one of 12 major
 plates that form the outer skin of our planet.
 
 00:05:40.000 --> 00:05:44.999
 The plates are floating on molten material
 below forcing them to crash together
 
 00:05:45.000 --> 00:05:49.999
 or pull apart at the edges. Over
 90% of all earthquakes occur
 
 00:05:50.000 --> 00:05:54.999
 where plates meet. But the plate\'s cores
 or cratons have remained relatively stable
 
 00:05:55.000 --> 00:05:59.999
 for billions of years. They have
 become rigid. When earthquake strike,
 
 00:06:00.000 --> 00:06:04.999
 seismic waves travel great distances
 through this dense solid rock.
 
 00:06:05.000 --> 00:06:09.999
 At the edge of many crustal
 plates, the landscape reflects
 
 00:06:10.000 --> 00:06:14.999
 the violence of rocks grinding together.
 California straddles the boundary
 
 00:06:15.000 --> 00:06:19.999
 between the North American and Pacific plates.
 The rugged landscape is geologically very young
 
 00:06:20.000 --> 00:06:24.999
 and seismic waves break up quickly in
 the broken landscape they created.
 
 00:06:25.000 --> 00:06:29.999
 But there are exceptions.
 
 00:06:30.000 --> 00:06:34.999
 October 17th, 1909,
 
 00:06:35.000 --> 00:06:39.999
 San Francisco\'s Marina District was heavily
 damaged by the Loma Prieta earthquake,
 
 00:06:40.000 --> 00:06:44.999
 but the quake\'s epicenter was over 60 miles
 away. In between the heavily populated bay area
 
 00:06:45.000 --> 00:06:49.999
 suffered relatively little damage.
 The Marina District was hard hit
 
 00:06:50.000 --> 00:06:54.999
 because it is built on
 very soft sand and mud,
 
 00:06:55.000 --> 00:06:59.999
 ironically part of it was once a lagoon, which was
 filled in with sand and rubble from the 1906 earthquake.
 
 00:07:00.000 --> 00:07:04.999
 Seismic waves spread away from the Loma Prieta
 quake\'s epicenter through hard bedrock below.
 
 00:07:05.000 --> 00:07:09.999
 But nearing the Marina, they slowed
 down in the loose surface materials.
 
 00:07:10.000 --> 00:07:14.999
 This caused the waves to grow into
 destructive surges at ground level.
 
 00:07:15.000 --> 00:07:19.999
 The New Madrid earthquake zone
 
 00:07:20.000 --> 00:07:24.999
 lies buried in the Mississippi River valley.
 Connecting with the river is a vast network of
 
 00:07:25.000 --> 00:07:29.999
 more rivers, streams, and lakes, all draining
 the wet climate of the mid-continent.
 
 00:07:30.000 --> 00:07:34.999
 These waterways eroded the land and
 left valleys of loose sediment
 
 00:07:35.000 --> 00:07:39.999
 over hard crustal rocks below,
 a dangerous combination.
 
 00:07:40.000 --> 00:07:44.999
 Seismic waves travel great distances through the rigid crust
 then build to violent force in soft river valleys sediments.
 
 00:07:45.000 --> 00:07:50.000
 By coincidence, this is
 where most people live.
 
 00:07:55.000 --> 00:08:00.000
 [music]
 
 00:08:05.000 --> 00:08:10.000
 [music]
 
 00:08:15.000 --> 00:08:20.000
 [music]
 
 00:08:30.000 --> 00:08:35.000
 [music]
 
 00:08:40.000 --> 00:08:45.000
 [music]
 
 00:08:50.000 --> 00:08:54.999
 [music]
 
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 The face of the New Madrid earthquake
 zone has changed dramatically
 
 00:09:00.000 --> 00:09:04.999
 since the great quakes of 1811 and 12.
 The region has become
 
 00:09:05.000 --> 00:09:09.999
 a major agricultural and industrial producer. The
 busiest transportation corridor in the nation,
 
 00:09:10.000 --> 00:09:14.999
 the Mississippi River, winds its way
 through. Crowded interstate highways
 
 00:09:15.000 --> 00:09:19.999
 and the dense web of railroads
 crisscross the earthquake zone.
 
 00:09:20.000 --> 00:09:24.999
 Belowground, natural gas and oil pipelines connect
 refineries in the South with customers in the Northeast
 
 00:09:25.000 --> 00:09:29.999
 where one quarter of the
 nation\'s energy is consumed.
 
 00:09:30.000 --> 00:09:34.999
 In Memphis, Elvis Presley\'s Graceland attracts
 more visitors than any other home in America,
 
 00:09:35.000 --> 00:09:39.999
 except the White House. And Memphis airport serves as distribution
 headquarters for the world\'s biggest freight carrier.
 
 00:09:40.000 --> 00:09:44.999
 The wilderness of 1811 and 12
 
 00:09:45.000 --> 00:09:49.999
 is indeed gone. And as the
 works of people replaced it,
 
 00:09:50.000 --> 00:09:54.999
 the New Madrid earthquake zone remains
 silent. So the area grew up unarmed
 
 00:09:55.000 --> 00:09:59.999
 against the fury of earthquakes. When an
 earthquake does happen in Central Eastern US,
 
 00:10:00.000 --> 00:10:04.999
 the damage areas are gonna be a
 lot bigger and it\'s gonna be
 
 00:10:05.000 --> 00:10:09.999
 a higher density of damage then you would see
 for similar sized earthquake in California.
 
 00:10:10.000 --> 00:10:14.999
 Most of the buildings in the
 Central Eastern United States
 
 00:10:15.000 --> 00:10:19.999
 are constructed from unreinforced masonry
 which has virtually no resistance
 
 00:10:20.000 --> 00:10:24.999
 to strong ground shaking. In
 fact, the last major earthquake
 
 00:10:25.000 --> 00:10:29.999
 that happened in Central
 Eastern US was in 1895,
 
 00:10:30.000 --> 00:10:34.999
 when we developed this whole new infrastructure.
 Since then, it hasn\'t been tested
 
 00:10:35.000 --> 00:10:39.999
 by a strong damaging earthquake. The same
 way that California seems to get tested
 
 00:10:40.000 --> 00:10:44.999
 every 10 or 20 years, there\'s a strong
 earthquake that knocks down buildings,
 
 00:10:45.000 --> 00:10:49.999
 they put up new ones, they\'re designed to
 withstand, resist those forces better.
 
 00:10:50.000 --> 00:10:54.999
 But we haven\'t had the benefit of that
 kind of testing in the Central Eastern US.
 
 00:10:55.000 --> 00:10:59.999
 So when one finally does happen, the
 other projections and damage is gonna be
 
 00:11:00.000 --> 00:11:04.999
 a lot more serious. Suzanne, can you
 come look at this, please? Sure. Yeah.
 
 00:11:05.000 --> 00:11:09.999
 When will the next large earthquake strike?
 What will it do to the Central United States?
 
 00:11:10.000 --> 00:11:14.999
 For decades, scientists have
 been searching for the answers,
 
 00:11:15.000 --> 00:11:19.999
 but the earthquake zone does not reveal its secrets
 easily. The Mississippi River running chocolate brown
 
 00:11:20.000 --> 00:11:24.999
 with silt buried the zone
 under 3,000 feet of mud.
 
 00:11:25.000 --> 00:11:29.999
 Advanced earthquake studies developed in California
 do not work well here. We have to sample everything
 
 00:11:30.000 --> 00:11:34.999
 from the surface because the seismicity
 is between 5 and 15 kilometers deep.
 
 00:11:35.000 --> 00:11:39.999
 You can\'t dig a hole that deep and look for something. We don\'t
 quite have that technology. And in San Andreas like situation,
 
 00:11:40.000 --> 00:11:44.999
 you can see the fault. You can walk out and
 you can find the trace of it, you can see it
 
 00:11:45.000 --> 00:11:49.999
 in the dramatic topography that creates
 San Andreas Lake. But in New Madrid,
 
 00:11:50.000 --> 00:11:54.999
 it\'s not right there for us to say.
 It\'s not right there for us to map.
 
 00:11:55.000 --> 00:11:59.999
 Borrowing methods used for oil exploration,
 scientists looked through the surface layer of mud
 
 00:12:00.000 --> 00:12:04.999
 and probed the rocks below. In the
 early 19070s, they discovered
 
 00:12:05.000 --> 00:12:09.999
 a buried swath of fractured twisted rocks
 about 200 miles long and 40 miles wide.
 
 00:12:10.000 --> 00:12:14.999
 The structure was named the Reelfoot Rift.
 
 00:12:15.000 --> 00:12:19.999
 The late Dr. (inaudible), a geophysicist at
 St. Louis University, used newspaper reports
 
 00:12:20.000 --> 00:12:24.999
 to locate earthquakes in the rift. His
 results have stood the test of time
 
 00:12:25.000 --> 00:12:29.999
 despite the reliability of old news stories. Modern
 instruments corrected the reliability problem.
 
 00:12:30.000 --> 00:12:34.999
 Up until 1974,
 
 00:12:35.000 --> 00:12:39.999
 we just knew that earthquakes were
 occurring down in the Bootheel, Missouri.
 
 00:12:40.000 --> 00:12:44.999
 1974, St. Louis University was
 able to establish a modern, dense,
 
 00:12:45.000 --> 00:12:49.999
 regional size and graphic network.
 As soon as that was installed
 
 00:12:50.000 --> 00:12:54.999
 and earthquakes were recorded,
 very strong patterns emerged
 
 00:12:55.000 --> 00:12:59.999
 uh… showing where the earthquakes
 occurred in the region.
 
 00:13:00.000 --> 00:13:04.999
 We with our seismic networks can record
 
 00:13:05.000 --> 00:13:09.999
 umm… and locate an earthquake about every two
 days, and there will be an earthquake about
 
 00:13:10.000 --> 00:13:14.999
 92 (inaudible) to 2.5. And certainly
 that level of activity, number magnitude
 
 00:13:15.000 --> 00:13:19.999
 five earthquakes that we have seen in the last
 30 years is much larger than anywhere else
 
 00:13:20.000 --> 00:13:24.999
 in the Eastern United States.
 So relative to, you know,
 
 00:13:25.000 --> 00:13:29.999
 other areas of the Eastern United
 States, New Madrid is a hotspot.
 
 00:13:30.000 --> 00:13:34.999
 The earthquakes trace out a zigzag pattern when plotted
 on a map, but their epicenters are actually located
 
 00:13:35.000 --> 00:13:39.999
 2 to 10 miles below the surface, along
 deep faults in the earth\'s crust.
 
 00:13:40.000 --> 00:13:44.999
 [music]
 
 00:13:45.000 --> 00:13:49.999
 These cubes represent earthquakes
 along deeply buried faults,
 
 00:13:50.000 --> 00:13:54.999
 swinging below New Madrid, seismicity
 picks up then dies out farther north.
 
 00:13:55.000 --> 00:14:00.000
 To learn what causes these quakes, we must
 journey back in time half a billion years.
 
 00:14:05.000 --> 00:14:09.999
 At that time, the continent began to
 slowly pull apart. Molten magma swelled up
 
 00:14:10.000 --> 00:14:14.999
 from below causing the crust to bulge
 and crack open up the surface.
 
 00:14:15.000 --> 00:14:19.999
 Extreme heat and pressure continued splitting
 the rigid crust allowing magma to shoot up
 
 00:14:20.000 --> 00:14:24.999
 through fissures and erupt on the surface
 forming volcanoes. The Reelfoot Rift
 
 00:14:25.000 --> 00:14:29.999
 was tearing the continent in half.
 Now this is a fairly common
 
 00:14:30.000 --> 00:14:34.999
 umm… geologic process worldwide.
 
 00:14:35.000 --> 00:14:39.999
 And when it happens on a large global
 scale, it can form new oceans,
 
 00:14:40.000 --> 00:14:44.999
 new ocean is opening up right now
 in the Red Sea area for instance.
 
 00:14:45.000 --> 00:14:49.999
 So but many rifts are not successful,
 they fail, they never make it
 
 00:14:50.000 --> 00:14:54.999
 to the stage of actual splitting a
 continent and creating new oceanic crust.
 
 00:14:55.000 --> 00:14:59.999
 And Reelfoot rift was
 one of the (inaudible).
 
 00:15:00.000 --> 00:15:04.999
 Over the next 300 million years, the
 volcanoes and the doomed rift went extinct.
 
 00:15:05.000 --> 00:15:09.999
 The thin fractured crust cooled back down collapsing
 under its own weight to form a long wide valley.
 
 00:15:10.000 --> 00:15:14.999
 Ancient oceans then flooded much of
 North America from millions of years.
 
 00:15:15.000 --> 00:15:19.999
 They left behind thousands of feet of sediment
 which collected in the sunken Reelfoot rift.
 
 00:15:20.000 --> 00:15:24.999
 Through the eons, the rift made several
 weak attempts to pull apart again.
 
 00:15:25.000 --> 00:15:29.999
 Magma started up old fractures
 but never reached the surface.
 
 00:15:30.000 --> 00:15:34.999
 Sixty million years ago, rifting stopped.
 The crust sank down once again.
 
 00:15:35.000 --> 00:15:39.999
 And natural erosion filled the rift
 with another layer of sediments.
 
 00:15:40.000 --> 00:15:44.999
 The Mississippi River began flowing down the rift
 valley after the last ice age about 10,000 years ago.
 
 00:15:45.000 --> 00:15:49.999
 But down below, the shattered
 rifted rocks remained.
 
 00:15:50.000 --> 00:15:54.999
 We\'ve got a much weaker overall crust
 than you would out in the crater.
 
 00:15:55.000 --> 00:15:59.999
 And that\'s where we find larger quarts
 
 00:16:00.000 --> 00:16:04.999
 and the stable continental areas.
 So we feel that
 
 00:16:05.000 --> 00:16:09.999
 umm… as the… as the ancient faults
 of the Reelfoot rift system,
 
 00:16:10.000 --> 00:16:14.999
 they\'re regenerating earthquakes today.
 The ancient faults are kept alive
 
 00:16:15.000 --> 00:16:19.999
 by subtle tectonic forces. Stress in the
 earth\'s crust is squeezing the rift
 
 00:16:20.000 --> 00:16:24.999
 from the east and west. When stress is great enough,
 the old faults which are at an angle to the pressure,
 
 00:16:25.000 --> 00:16:29.999
 slips suddenly causing earthquakes.
 
 00:16:30.000 --> 00:16:34.999
 The southern end of Reelfoot rift near
 Memphis is currently under the most stress.
 
 00:16:35.000 --> 00:16:39.999
 With a tendency for big earthquakes to strike
 at the ends of faults, this is a good candidate
 
 00:16:40.000 --> 00:16:44.999
 for the zones next big quake.
 The question is when.
 
 00:16:45.000 --> 00:16:49.999
 I would not be surprised to witness a greater than
 magnitude six earthquake in my lifetime out here.
 
 00:16:50.000 --> 00:16:54.999
 I\'m comfortable that we know roughly
 
 00:16:55.000 --> 00:16:59.999
 where in the broad sense, somewhere in
 the current very active seismic zones,
 
 00:17:00.000 --> 00:17:04.999
 there will be a magnitude six or greater
 earthquake certainly in my lifetime,
 
 00:17:05.000 --> 00:17:09.999
 but we still have a lot more to learn. We don\'t
 know when the magnitude eights will occur,
 
 00:17:10.000 --> 00:17:15.000
 probably not in my lifetime but possibly.
 We just don\'t know.
 
 00:17:40.000 --> 00:17:44.999
 With few defenses against earthquakes,
 even a magnitude six to seven earthquake
 
 00:17:45.000 --> 00:17:49.999
 could inflict heavy losses in this region.
 Damage will be concentrated
 
 00:17:50.000 --> 00:17:54.999
 where geologic conditions are most hazardous.
 A fascinating phenomenon called liquefaction
 
 00:17:55.000 --> 00:17:59.999
 will be widespread along rivers
 and streams. It\'s a phenomenon
 
 00:18:00.000 --> 00:18:04.999
 where earthquake waves start
 shaking the sand. Soft wet sand
 
 00:18:05.000 --> 00:18:09.999
 will start compacting together, like when
 you take a box of corn flakes and shake it
 
 00:18:10.000 --> 00:18:14.999
 and the corn flakes in the box settle. That happens
 with the sand. And as the sand starts to settle,
 
 00:18:15.000 --> 00:18:19.999
 the water that\'s between the grains of sand
 tries to get out from between the grains.
 
 00:18:20.000 --> 00:18:24.999
 And if there\'s something solid on top of the
 stand like a layer of clay, the pressure breaks
 
 00:18:25.000 --> 00:18:29.999
 the surface layer of clay and sand
 will come erupting onto the surface
 
 00:18:30.000 --> 00:18:34.999
 in sort of a liquefied form, so we call it
 liquefaction. And what this often causes is,
 
 00:18:35.000 --> 00:18:39.999
 first of all, the ground to break up.
 The ground also loses
 
 00:18:40.000 --> 00:18:44.999
 all capacity to hold up objects such as
 building, so buildings will settle, sink,
 
 00:18:45.000 --> 00:18:49.999
 or tilt during liquefaction. And many
 earthquakes, there are things called
 
 00:18:50.000 --> 00:18:54.999
 sand blows which form. The upper layer of clay will
 crack and the sand will come erupting to the surface
 
 00:18:55.000 --> 00:18:59.999
 in sort of a volcano and form a
 circular patch of sand maybe 20-40 feet
 
 00:19:00.000 --> 00:19:04.999
 across of the crater in the middle. That\'s very
 typical. We see it in almost any earthquake
 
 00:19:05.000 --> 00:19:09.999
 over magnitude six anywhere in the world.
 What I\'m going to do is
 
 00:19:10.000 --> 00:19:14.999
 walk on this pristine sand
 that can bear my weight.
 
 00:19:15.000 --> 00:19:19.999
 And once I start bouncing up and down, you\'ll
 see that as the sand starts to compact
 
 00:19:20.000 --> 00:19:24.999
 and the water comes out of its pores,
 the sand liquefies losing all ability
 
 00:19:25.000 --> 00:19:29.999
 to bare my weight. And if we watch
 afterwards, we will see that
 
 00:19:30.000 --> 00:19:34.999
 water erupting in the surface
 in miniature sand boils.
 
 00:19:35.000 --> 00:19:39.999
 This is a small sand filled
 fissure caused by liquefaction
 
 00:19:40.000 --> 00:19:44.999
 during the 1811 and 12 earthquakes. From the air,
 huge light-colored patches of liquefied sand
 
 00:19:45.000 --> 00:19:49.999
 from those quakes are plainly
 visible in farmers\' fields today.
 
 00:19:50.000 --> 00:19:54.999
 Liquefaction during the 1811 and 12 quakes
 devastated a 1,400-square-mile area
 
 00:19:55.000 --> 00:19:59.999
 along the Mississippi River.
 Today, this same area
 
 00:20:00.000 --> 00:20:04.999
 is covered with thousands of farms and
 many communities. Highway 55 traverses
 
 00:20:05.000 --> 00:20:09.999
 the entire liquefaction zone. A modern
 well build interstate, it is defenseless
 
 00:20:10.000 --> 00:20:14.999
 against a liquid-like foundation. The earth
 levees along the river are also vulnerable,
 
 00:20:15.000 --> 00:20:19.999
 especially during high flood stage.
 The river\'s natural banks
 
 00:20:20.000 --> 00:20:24.999
 now lined with petroleum storage tanks,
 grain-loading facilities, original power plant,
 
 00:20:25.000 --> 00:20:29.999
 and long-bridge approaches are especially
 vulnerable. Failure of these kind of riverbanks
 
 00:20:30.000 --> 00:20:34.999
 normally occurs by a process
 that we call lateral spreading
 
 00:20:35.000 --> 00:20:39.999
 which occurs when liquefied sand and water
 layers beneath the surface of the ground
 
 00:20:40.000 --> 00:20:44.999
 are shaken repeatedly over a long period
 of time during a major earthquake.
 
 00:20:45.000 --> 00:20:49.999
 But the eyewitness accounts from the 1811 and 12
 earthquakes indicate that even those low riverbanks
 
 00:20:50.000 --> 00:20:54.999
 experienced massive failure.
 Transportation may be disrupted for years
 
 00:20:55.000 --> 00:20:59.999
 by liquefaction alone, but other earthquake
 effects will add to the problem.
 
 00:21:00.000 --> 00:21:04.999
 In a future, major earthquake,
 there\'s very little doubt
 
 00:21:05.000 --> 00:21:09.999
 that there will be major landsliding from bluff such as this
 as well as bluffs that are farther away from the river.
 
 00:21:10.000 --> 00:21:14.999
 Large amounts of this land will
 simply flow towards the river
 
 00:21:15.000 --> 00:21:19.999
 and trees and farmland and the ground
 itself will simply be precipitated
 
 00:21:20.000 --> 00:21:24.999
 into the river. When we think ahead to future
 possible earthquakes in the midcontinent,
 
 00:21:25.000 --> 00:21:29.999
 navigation is probably one of the issues
 that we ought to deal with most seriously
 
 00:21:30.000 --> 00:21:34.999
 because obviously, a large
 amount of barge traffic
 
 00:21:35.000 --> 00:21:39.999
 goes up and down the Mississippi River, and after a major
 earthquake, it is likely that the river would be unnavigable
 
 00:21:40.000 --> 00:21:44.999
 for quite some period of time,
 maybe weeks or even months.
 
 00:21:45.000 --> 00:21:49.999
 [sil.]
 
 00:21:50.000 --> 00:21:54.999
 Landslides and liquefaction are triggered
 by strong shaking during earthquakes.
 
 00:21:55.000 --> 00:21:59.999
 By itself, shaking is a serious threat to weak
 structures. Most vulnerable are old bridges
 
 00:22:00.000 --> 00:22:04.999
 and unreinforced masonry
 buildings built on lose ground.
 
 00:22:05.000 --> 00:22:09.999
 Unfortunately, many historic ornate buildings around the
 New Madrid earthquake zone fall under this category.
 
 00:22:10.000 --> 00:22:14.999
 When most of us think of earthquakes,
 
 00:22:15.000 --> 00:22:19.999
 we pictured gaping fissures like this one.
 This is indeed a common scene
 
 00:22:20.000 --> 00:22:24.999
 when a quake strikes California. The
 Landers quake in 1992 opened fissure
 
 00:22:25.000 --> 00:22:29.999
 50 miles long across the floor of the Mojave Desert.
 But the faults of the New Madrid quick zone
 
 00:22:30.000 --> 00:22:34.999
 are too deeply buried to rupture the
 ground except in massive quakes.
 
 00:22:35.000 --> 00:22:39.999
 Liquefaction, shaking, and landslides are the
 main effects of earthquakes in this region.
 
 00:22:40.000 --> 00:22:44.999
 And the city most threatened by earthquakes is
 the Blues music capital of the world Memphis.
 
 00:22:45.000 --> 00:22:53.000
 [music]
 
 00:22:55.000 --> 00:22:59.999
 As musicians play on Beale Street,
 scientists from Memphis State University
 
 00:23:00.000 --> 00:23:04.999
 are evaluating Shelby County\'s public
 buildings and bridges for earthquake safety.
 
 00:23:05.000 --> 00:23:09.999
 Preliminary results are sobering. One out of four
 hospitals are in the highest seismic risk category,
 
 00:23:10.000 --> 00:23:14.999
 25% of the public schools,
 and 15% of the fire stations
 
 00:23:15.000 --> 00:23:19.999
 also fall in this category. A
 sampling of the county\'s 900 bridges
 
 00:23:20.000 --> 00:23:24.999
 showed that one out of four are
 at the highest level of risk.
 
 00:23:25.000 --> 00:23:29.999
 Seismic evaluation of public utilities and
 other critical lifelines is also underway.
 
 00:23:30.000 --> 00:23:34.999
 These studies will guide the strengthening of
 only the most dangerous and critical structures.
 
 00:23:35.000 --> 00:23:39.999
 Retrofitting is expensive and there are
 a great number of weak facilities.
 
 00:23:40.000 --> 00:23:44.999
 On the other hand, building new buildings to
 be earthquake safe raises construction costs
 
 00:23:45.000 --> 00:23:49.999
 only 10% on average. But earthquake
 codes are weak to non-existent
 
 00:23:50.000 --> 00:23:54.999
 in the New Madrid quake zone. The
 state of Kentucky is an exception.
 
 00:23:55.000 --> 00:23:59.999
 They adopted modern earthquake codes in
 1981. And recently, surrounding states
 
 00:24:00.000 --> 00:24:04.999
 are taking earthquakes more seriously. Researchers
 found new evidence of one or more massive quakes
 
 00:24:05.000 --> 00:24:09.999
 near Vincennes, Indiana. The large
 cities of Indianapolis and Evansville
 
 00:24:10.000 --> 00:24:14.999
 are less than 100 miles away. Chicago, Illinois
 built on a veneer of very loose lake muds
 
 00:24:15.000 --> 00:24:19.999
 is 200 miles away. Skyscrapers
 are in danger of excessive swing
 
 00:24:20.000 --> 00:24:24.999
 from low-frequency
 high-amplitude seismic waves.
 
 00:24:25.000 --> 00:24:33.000
 [music]
 
 00:24:40.000 --> 00:24:44.999
 There\'s another way to view this scenario. Earthquakes
 are at the very root of this region\'s prosperity.
 
 00:24:45.000 --> 00:24:49.999
 The Mississippi River flows through here
 because rifting opened a natural pathway
 
 00:24:50.000 --> 00:24:54.999
 to the sea. Earthquakes
 literally shaped this rich land
 
 00:24:55.000 --> 00:25:00.000
 and will continue to do so.
