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Next Big Quake:

A Major Earthquake is Highly Likely Soon

What to Do Right Now to Prepare

How to Reduce Earthquake Damage
Estimate Your Risk
Determine the Safety of Your Home and School
Determine the Safety of Other Buildings You Use
More Information on Buildings and Bracing
Understand How Earthquake Risk Varies By Location
Determine if you Live or Work in Particularly Hazardous Area

Reduce Earthquake Damage

5. Understand How Earthquake Risk Varies by Location

Earthquake damage is typically concentrated in locations that can be identified in advance:
  • Areas nearest to the fault segments that are likely to move.
  • Areas of soft soils where shaking is increased.
  • Areas where the ground may settle or slide.

Failure of the ground during an earthquake can happen in many ways. Cracks commonly rupture the ground near the slipped segment of the earthquake fault. Landslides are likely on steep slopes, especially if an earthquake hits during the rainy season. Soft ground -- like that around the margins of San Francisco Bay -- may settle during shaking. This settling will add to the hazard already posed by shaking.

Damage in the Marina District of San Francisco during the Loma Prieta earthquake of October 17, 1989, illustrates well the problems aggravated by soft soil. This area sustained major damage even though it was more than 50 miles north of the fault segment that slipped in the Santa Cruz Mountains. The damage was unusually high primarily because the shaking was increased by the soft soil, and the ground failed. Furthermore, many buildings in the Marina District had ÒsoftÓ first stories and other design details that are hazardous during earthquakes. During the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906, the shores along the lagoon that later became the Marina District experienced some of the strongest shaking observed in San Francisco. Shaking during the Loma Prieta earthquake was 3 to 4 times stronger in the Marina District than on bedrock at Fort Mason, just a few blocks to the east, because the Marina is underlain by mud nearly 100 feet thick.

But there is another reason for the severe damage in the Marina District. In 1912, the original lagoon was filled with sand to prepare for the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Sand was an unfortunate choice because, when wet, it can flow like a liquid during the shaking of an earthquake. This process, called liquefaction, deforms streets, sidewalks, pipelines, and buildings. The filled ground in the Marina settled during the Loma Prieta earthquake as much as 5 inches. Seventy-three percent of the buildings in the Marina District that became unsafe for occupancy or entry after the quake were located on the filled land. Techniques have been developed in the past few decades to engineer landfills so as to reduce the chance of liquefaction and ground failure during earthquakes.

This detailed map of the Marina District shows the areas underlain by sandy fill and the distribution of damaged structures. Land that liquefies during one earthquake has been observed to liquefy again in subsequent earthquakes. Special engineering techniques are available to minimize the effect of liquefaction, but they involve significant costs.

Land Use Planning  

Earthquake hazards vary throughout your community depending on the closeness to active faults, the type of soil, the potential for ground failure, and the age and design of structures. Recognizing these differences can provide a basis for guiding future development to minimize earthquake hazards. Clearly, new facilities such as hospitals and fire stations would best be located in the safest sites, and the most hazardous regions would best be designated for parks or other low-density uses. Often, however, even hazardous areas are too valuable not to be used, and special design procedures are needed.

In the early 1970s, each California county and city was required to develop a Seismic Safety Element for its General Plan that included consideration of earthquake hazards. Citizens interested in the future development of their community may wish to consult this plan at their local planning office and to encourage updates of this plan in the near future.

Determine if you Live or Work in Particularly Hazardous Area >