Toast, tsunamis, and the really big one | Chris Goldfinger | TEDxMtHood

Following an article in the New Yorker on July 20, 2015, the Cascadia subduction zone got more attention nationwide than it had ever seen previously. Most in the pacific northwest knew about Cascadia, but this article brought knowledge of the hazards to a national audience. A follow up article on July 28, 2015, the author Kathryn Shultz, wrote about how people can prepare for a CSZ earthquake and tsunami. Shultz was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing and a National Magazine Award for “The Really Big One,” recognition for her writing and the impact of this article.
On May 18, 2016, Dr. Chris Goldfinger presented a TEDx talk for TEDxMtHood. His talk was about the Cascadia subduction zone. This is a great talk for lay persons (most people). Here is Dr. Goldfinger’s OSU website. Here is Dr. Goldfinger’s earthquake blog.

    I provide more background information on the CSZ in several places.

  • Cascadia’s 315th Anniversary 2015.01.26
  • Earthquake Information about the CSZ 2015.10.08
  • Cascadia Paleoearthquakes 2012/03/11
    Here is what Dr. Goldfinger wrote to introduce his talk online.

  • I wondered why a crowd of New Yorkers would be interested in earthquakes. Several hundred gathered last October to hear a panel discuss “The Really Big One,” a New Yorker article about the Pacific Northwest that went viral after revealing to many what we geologists have known for a long time.
  • We were the warm-up acts for the “real stars” of the New Yorker Festival: Billy Joel, Norman Lear and the like… So I asked the crowd to imagine that someone came on the evening news one day and reported the discovery of a new, very large fault, a subduction zone that ran from Virginia to Newfoundland, generating magnitude 9 earthquakes on a regular basis, and would soon destroy New York.
  • Well, that exact scenario is not going to happen, but it did happen in the Northwest. It wasn’t a sudden thing, the news of this has been dribbling out over 30 years, so when the New Yorker article came out, I expected nothing to happen really.
  • But, instead, the story went viral and revealed something startling and new to the country, and even to a lot of Northwesterners – all of whom I was pretty sure had heard this information before. After all, it had been the subject of numerous documentaries, and tons of print and television news stories. And really, to west coast-centric me, the New Yorker was just a magazine with not-very-funny cartoons that piled up in dentists’ offices.
  • But what the article revealed was not not-new information, but rather that the story was not well known at all.
  • My inbox filled up with hundreds of emails from people all around the region, wondering if they would be “toast” living west of I-5, wondering if a tsunami would come up the Columbia to destroy Portland, and even wondering if one would come over the coast range and “get” Medford. Really, I’m not making this up. Not that we’re not in a tough spot: we are. But what is the reality?
  • The geologic records of previous earthquakes now stretches back ~ 10,000 years making Cascadia as we call it, the best-known fault on Earth. We can’t know when the next earthquake will come.
  • I think we’re collectively still blinking and hoping we heard something wrong. But the evidence is now about as airtight as it gets, so what to do? We have an opportunity to prepare for this and save lives. Will we learn from others and from the past and do it right?
  • This is what I’m going to talk about at TEDxMtHood this June: the seriousness of The Big One, and how we can all be prepared when it hits.
  • Here is a low angle oblique cross section of the CSZ.

    Here is a short bio for Dr. Goldfinger.

  • Dr. Chris Goldfinger is a marine geologist and geophysicist whose focus is on great earthquakes and the structure of subduction zones around the world. He is experienced using deep submersibles, multi-beam and side scan sonar, seismic reflection, and other marine geophysical tools all over the world. Recently, Chris was in the national spotlight after being featured in Kathryn Schulz’s article in The New Yorker, “The Really Big One.” His extensive research on the Cascadia subduction zone yielded an earthquake record extending through the Holocene epoch helping to develop a model of segmentation and earthquake recurrence. Conclusion: our area is overdue for a major earthquake.
  • Originally hailing from Palo Alto, Chris married a Salem girl and is currently Professor of Marine Geology at Oregon State University. His dad worked for NASA; so growing up in a house filled with stuff from the early probes like Voyager, Ranger, Surveyor, etc. made interest in earth sciences a natural progression. He is also into windsurfing, ocean sailing, and aerobatic flying.

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