Video: Successful Southern California Earthquake Drill


Earthquakes are far more than just geological phenomena — they can greatly alter the way people live by damaging whole communities.

A new USGS video production, “The Great Southern California ShakeOut: An Earthquake Scenario Based On Science,” shows how science is used by government agencies, emergency responders, policymakers and the public to help build safer communities.

It is based on the USGS ShakeOut Scenario, the scientific foundation for the Great Southern California ShakeOut, a region-wide earthquake drill conducted on November 13, 2008.

Other interview subjects include the USGS, the Office of Homeland Security, the County of Riverside, the California Governor’s Office, the East Valley Water District, the Art Center College of Design, the County of San Bernardino and a professor emeritus from Colorado State University.

In addition to interviews, this video also discusses how such an earthquake would affect downtown Los Angeles and the San Andreas Fault-crossing Cajon Pass, a narrow corridor through the San Gabriel Mountains known as an important “lifeline corridor” where roads, railroads, water and energy pipelines, and electrical and communications infrastructure provide service to millions of residences, businesses, commuters and communities in Southern California.

View this video in episode 75 of CoreCast at www.usgs.gov/corecast. Learn more about the USGS’s role in the Great ShakeOut at www.usgs.gov/shakeout. More information about the Great Southern California ShakeOut can be found at www.shakeout.org.

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For some unsettling (and really cool!) video of the 1995 Kobe, Japan earthquake, see A Lesson in Recovery.

Data Centers are particularly vulnerable to earthquakes. This guide offers lots of useful recommendations for Data Processing Facility Earthquake Hazard Mitigation.

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