
today
9 a.m. T-ball Registration Boys and Girls Club Teen Center
read >9 a.m. Doris Niles Humboldt County Science Fair Humboldt State University
read >11:30 a.m. Keep Your Business in the Black by Going Green Red Lion Hotel
read >noon Six Rivers Brewery 6th Anniversary Six Rivers Brewery
read >noon Joe Garceau Unplugged Has Beans
read >4 p.m. EPIC Brews and Views Humboldt Brews
read >5 p.m. St. Patrick's Day Celebration Eagle House Victorian Inn
read >6 p.m. St. Patrick's Day Screening Arcata Theater Lounge
read >6:30 p.m. Family Literacy Night Humboldt County Library
read >6:30 p.m. Women’s Health Naturally Eureka Natural Foods
read >7 p.m. Dharma Dojo Blondies Food And Drink
read >8 p.m. Karaoke w/ Chris Clay Boiler Room
read >9 p.m. Reggae & Dancehall Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. '80s Night w/ DJ Leonard Blue Lake Casino
read >9 p.m. Whomp Whomp Wednesdays Nocturnum
read >9 p.m. Triple Junction (classic rock) Red Fox Tavern
read >10 p.m. Weirdo Wednesdays Alibi Lounge and Restaurant
read >previous columns
Jan. 28, 2010
Altruism's Hidden Benefits
I'm an easy mark. If someone in the Plaza wants ...
read >Jan. 21, 2010
A Skin-color Enigma
Growing up in England in the ’50s, I thought of ...
read >Jan. 14, 2010
The Monty Hall Problem
So much ink has been spilled over the "Monty Hall ...
read >Photos
Sophie Smells a Shaker
By Don Garlick
You have undoubtedly seen the YouTube video "My dog Sophie senses the 6.5 earthquake at the Times Standard." Sophie springs into action and rushes to her owner, Jessica Richelderfer, almost six seconds before the serious shaking begins. Sophie's video is widely invoked to support the notion that animals possess supernatural senses.
The sudden failure of a fault at depth produces two kinds of waves: fast-moving P-waves (for primary, pressure or push-pull) in which the rocking motion is perpendicular to the wave front, and slower moving S-waves (for secondary, sideways or shear) in which the motion is parallel to the wave-front.
This diagram shows the P and S wave-fronts three seconds after the failure (at the depth of the earthquake). When P-waves reach seismometers, it is possible to determine whether their first motions were pushes or pulls. The black and white quadrants of the sphere are based on that information and show that the stress was oriented north-south. The locations of aftershocks provide the strike of the fault (northeast-southwest). The slip was horizontal on a vertical fault, and thus no tsunami was expected.
The seismic energy radiated in different directions is roughly depicted by the thickness of the diagram's circles. The very weak P-waves felt by Sophie arrived in Eureka six seconds before the much more energetic S-waves. Fortuna, equally distant from the focus or hypocenter of the earthquake, experienced stronger P-waves relative to Eureka's, but smaller S-waves (which are typically more damaging). Fortuna, fortunately, was neither in the direction of the fault's strike nor perpendicular to it.
Port-au-Prince's quake was much larger -- magnitude 7.0 -- and half the distance. (Each unit increase in magnitude represents a 10-fold increase in amplitude, 30-fold in energy.) Our own disaster will occur when the Cascadia subduction megathrust fails ("Garlick's Notebook," Oct. 4, 2007) as it did 310 years ago. The consequent tsunami left a layer of sand in our bay and was recorded in Japan.
Don Garlick is a geology professor retired from HSU. He invites any questions relating to North Coast science, and if he cannot answer it he will find an expert who can. E-mail dorsgarlick@yahoo.com. He thanks Lori Dengler and Bob McPherson for their useful advice.


















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