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Quakeland: On the Road to America's Next Devastating Earthquake

von Kathryn Miles

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Earthquakes. You need to worry about them only if you're in San Francisco, right? Wrong. We have been making enormous changes to subterranean America, and Mother Earth, as always, has been making some of her own. . . . The consequences for our real estate, our civil engineering, and our communities will be huge because they will include earthquakes most of us do not expect and cannot imagine - at least not without reading Quakeland. Kathryn Miles descends into mines in the Northwest, visits the South to see what the Army Corps of Engineers in Memphis is learning about the next major US quake, uncovers the horrific risks of an earthquake in the Northeast, and interviews the people around the country who are addressing this ground shaking threat.… (mehr)
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A very interesting and informative book that still manages to be entertaining.it is sobering to think that some of the information is unlikely to be heeded by those that most need to hear it. I’d have liked a few more first person impact stories, but I think it was a conscious choice made by the author to avoid turning it into a book version of the 70’s disaster movies ( )
  cspiwak | Mar 6, 2024 |
Very interesting. ( )
  Anniik | Nov 26, 2022 |
This attempts to be a catch-all on everything earthquakes, going through money loss, eyewitness reports, and a pretty substantial expose on dams. As an opener, I suppose it could have had a few more exciting starts... but later on, when we got into the historical accounts of earthquakes, I think it got better.

Especially when we got to fracking.

Later, when we got into the real science of seismology, I really began to enjoy it. I was looking for real science, after all, but, of course, there's plenty about this that still seems to encourage con men. "I will predict! For a low, low cost of..." :)

I hope, one of these days, some REAL money will be poured into the field so we have real data.

This book was okay. Not the best, but it isn't bad. ( )
  bradleyhorner | Jun 1, 2020 |
In July, 1964 my husband and his family took a vacation out West. Although my husband was only twelve years old, he never forgot the "road that went into the lake" at Yellowstone National Park. In 1959 there had been an earthquake that caused a massive landslide into a lake. The lake rose 22 feet, so that the roads that once went to the Cabin Creek Campground ended at the lake, and new roads had to be made.

Here he was, camping with his family in an area that had been hit by a killer earthquake in his time. It was memorable.

Across the road was the canyon wall that caused the country's largest landslide ; it had buried nineteen people.

The first chapter of Quakeland recounts the story of a family, just like my husband's, who had gone camping in Yellowstone. The author takes us through their day, searching for the 'right' camping spot, setting up camp, and getting ready for bed. And then we are taken through the horrendous experience the campers endured when the earthquake collapsed the mountain side, sloshed the lake back and forth, creating winds so strong it ripped the clothing off campers, and then deluged the area with a wall of water that drove a stick into a camper's knee socket. Afterwards the lake was 22 feet higher.

It's enough to make me grateful my folks never took me out West camping.

Quakeland is full of stories that will send shivers up your spine. Not only because naturally occurring fault lines that transverse our country cause quakes, which in our ignorance we have built upon--cities like Memphis and Salt Lake City--but also because of human activity that causes earthquakes: dams and mines and fracking and even building tall buildings.

I used to be pretty smug about my home state being 'safe'. We can be hit by tornadoes, but no hurricanes. We aren't known for earthquakes. Yet, Michigan has had its earthquakes and likely will again. There are fault lines in the Upper Peninsula, through the center of the state, and on the Lake Huron side in the "thumb." The state can be shaken by quakes from the New Madrid fault.

When our son was growing up we went to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to camp. We took day trips, apparently all along fault lines! One day we toured the Quincy Mine. This copper mine was effectively closed in 1946. We were almost the only ones there that day. The tour took us to the 7th level of the mine. In 1914 the miners working at the Quincy mine caused a rock burst. Any time we redistribute pressure the earth will respond. Mining is a human-created cause of earthquakes, and the Keweenaw mining area has a history of quakes.

The biggest earthquake in Michigan history, magnitude 4.6, occurred in 1947 near Coldwater, MI, a flat, agricultural area in Southern Michigan just above the state line. In 1994 the state was hit by a magnitude 3.4 quake centered near Potterville, just west of Lansing. And in 2015 a magnitude 4.2 quake was centered in Galesburg just south of Kalamazoo. We have lived in Lansing, and a half-hour down the road from Coldwater and Kalamazoo. Four months ago a 2.2 quake occurred in Grosse Point, just east of Detroit.

So much for being 'safe' from earthquakes.

Miles style was entertaining and the information very accessible. Readers who enjoy learning about the natural world, disasters or potential disasters, and the implications of the energy industry's impact on our natural world will enjoy this book. Just be warned: this book may keep you awake at night.

I received a free book from the publisher through a Goodreads giveaway. ( )
  nancyadair | Sep 20, 2017 |
I won this in a GOODREADS giveaway. ( )
  tenamouse67 | Jan 6, 2018 |
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It cannot be expected that an examination of the phenomena connected with this disturbance will throw any light on the origin of earthquakes. Scientific men do not seem to have gained from the terrible earthquake that devastated the islland of Ischia, one year ago, or the great catastrophe of Krakatoa and the Straits of Sunda, one month later, much useful information in addition to that which they already possessed upon which to form new theories or reconstruct old ones. Whatever may be the cause - whether it is the falling of the roof of subterranean caves or the raging of a molten sea in the interior of the earth or the contraction of portions of the earth's crust caused by the gradual cooling of the entire ball - this fact is plain enough to nonscientific persons, that such disturbances are beyond the control of men, and that the dangers that accompany them are best avoided by living beyond the limits of the earthquake and volcanic regions. Those who look back upon the experience of yesterday, either with fear or with curiosity, may well rejoice that their lots are cast in a country where earthquakes do no harm. -New York Times, 11 August 1884
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Two years ago, a good friend returned from a mapmakers' conference with a gift for me: an enormous poster of the world. -Prologue
Picture a campsite - one of the standard-issue kinds replicated in national forests and parks around the country. -Chapter One
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Earthquakes. You need to worry about them only if you're in San Francisco, right? Wrong. We have been making enormous changes to subterranean America, and Mother Earth, as always, has been making some of her own. . . . The consequences for our real estate, our civil engineering, and our communities will be huge because they will include earthquakes most of us do not expect and cannot imagine - at least not without reading Quakeland. Kathryn Miles descends into mines in the Northwest, visits the South to see what the Army Corps of Engineers in Memphis is learning about the next major US quake, uncovers the horrific risks of an earthquake in the Northeast, and interviews the people around the country who are addressing this ground shaking threat.

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