Caltech
A chart of the area between the Japanese island of Hokkaido and the Japan Trench shows the amount of fault slip due to the March 2011 earthquake. The red area denotes slip of 50 meters (196 feet) or more. The question mark represents the researchers' current lack of information about the seismic potential of the region south of last year's quake.
By Alan Boyle
One year ago, the earthquake that struck Japan literally changed the spin of our planet and the length of our day ? but today, the biggest mystery surrounding the event is what didn't happen: Why wasn't the Tohoku earthquake even bigger?
"We really don't know what's going to happen in the future," said Thomas Heaton, director of Caltech's Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory. "And by the way, one of the big questions nobody seems to be talking about is ... why was Tohoku so small? Where's the rest of it? Was this a foreshock? We don't know that. Honestly, it was mostly in the northern part of the [Japan] trench. The southern part of the trench doesn't seem to have gone."
It may sound strange to talk about a magnitude-9.0 quake and tsunami as something that's mystifyingly small. But the way Heaton sees it, the unusual scenario that played out on March 11, 2011, shows how much we still have to learn about how earthquakes work. Moreover, it shows that scientists may not fully understand the mechanism of seismic shocks for the foreseeable future.
"The most obvious lesson learned is to plan for the unexpected," Heaton said.
Surprises from the Japan Trench
Scientists have long known that the Japan Trench, where the oceanic Pacific Plate dives beneath the continental Okhotsk Plate, was seismically active. It's part of the "Pacific Ring of Fire" that runs like a horseshoe around the ocean's edge. But scientists and engineers thought the trench wasn't capable of generating earthquakes that big ? and so they designed structures such as seawalls and nuclear power plants to fit what they saw as prudent probabilities.
"The real problem is that currently there's a view among society, and engineers, that we design for a risk factor," Heaton said. "What's the hazard, and I will design according to the hazard. And once I've met certain design criteria, I have confidence that my structure will survive at some given level."
So what happens when the big, unexpected event happens? Seawalls are breached. Airports are wrecked. Towns are wiped out. Nuclear plants are swamped. "They believed their risk models, and they shouldn't have," Heaton said.
One year after Japan's earthquake and tsunami, NBC's Ian Williams reports from a serene wasteland in the fishing village of Otsuchi, which lies near mountains of debris.
He said engineers should take more of a common-sensical approach to construction design, rather than focusing so much on? meeting the specifications dictated by risk analyses. "I think that we've really gotten ourselves off track there," Heaton said.
Uncertainties abound
It's tempting to think that Japan has had its "once-in-a-millennium" seismic shock, and that people can relax for the next 999 years. After all, last year's earthquake was big enough to shift Honshu, Japan's main island, as much as 13 feet to the east. It also gave Earth's axis a 6.5-inch readustment and shortened the length of the day by 1.8 microseconds.
But Heaton said the geophysical shifts raise additional questions. Here's a potential biggie: Honshu has been subsiding for the past century, and the earthquake just added to the subsidence. That was unexpected, because seismologists assumed that an earthquake would release the crustal strain and result in an uplift.
"We know we can't continue to go down at these rates forever, or Honshu would just disappear in a million years or so," Heaton said. Will the island slowly stop sinking and then start rising again? Or will the strain continue to build until another big earthquake releases it?
"We don't know the answer to that, but it's a pretty important question," Heaton said.
Last May, a team of researchers from Caltech and elsewhere analyzed the seismic data from before and after the quake, and found that significant slip was experienced along a 150-mile length of the Japan Trench fault ? which is about half the length that would have been expected for a magnitude-9.0 event. They also reported that the conditions they saw in the area of the quake's epicenter before March 11, 2011, still exist today in the area to the south, known as the Ibaraki region.
"It is important to note that we are not predicting an earthquake here," Caltech's Mark Simons, the study's lead author, said in a news release about the research. "However, we do not have data on the area, and therefore should focus attention there, given its proximity to Tokyo."
Nasty surprises
Just this week, Japanese researchers reported that Tokyo could be more vulnerable to a magnitude-7 quake in northern Tokyo Bay than they previously thought, and they said older structures should be reinforced to meet more stringent standards. "If a building narrowly fulfills the law's standards, its quake resistance is not high," the Daily Yomiuri quoted seismologist Takuya Nagae as saying.
Heaton said it only makes sense to expect further surprises from seismological studies, including some nasty ones. "My experience as a human is that there's a good chance there's something we didn't know. ... It keeps coming up over and over again that there are major holes in our understanding of the system," he said.
If that's the case, it's prudent to plan for the unexpected. And that concept may apply to more than seismology.
"If you don't really know what's going to happen, what's the best strategy for dealing with life when you have all those uncertainties out there?" Heaton asked. "They're all over the place, like in the financial system. Or when are you going to die? Well, you could die from old age. Maybe you'll die from a heart attack. Maybe you'll die from bird flu. What's the risk of bird flu? ... You can't put a number on it. So what does that mean? Should we ignore bird flu? No, of course not. It means you should study it, and if there are easy things that society can do to minimize the chance of everybody getting bird flu, you should pursue them."
Are those words to live by? Or is the view that we don't know when or where the next Big One will come just too unsettling? Feel free to weigh in with your comments below.
More about the Japan quake anniversary:
Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.
Source: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/09/10627441-japans-quake-still-poses-puzzles
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