How Science Can Save Lives:

We know plenty about earthquakes, but we don't always apply the knowledge [1]

   

By Kerry Sieh [2] 

 

For the past decade, my Indonesian colleagues and I have been trying to 
understand great earthquakes in Sumatra. We had learned enough by last year to 
start teaching island villagers living on top of the region's giant earthquake 
fault about the threat. I will not know until I visit them soon whether our 
efforts saved any lives. 

 

I am saddened but not surprised by our failure to apply what we had learned 
about earthquakes and tsunamis to warn the people living in Aceh or around the 
Bay of Bengal. We earth scientists are understanding slowly but surely that we 
have a role to play in the practical application of science to help lessen the 
suffering that nature can deliver. Fifty years ago we didn't know that 
earthquakes were caused by tectonic plate movement. Thirty years ago we didn't 
know how often big faults produced destructive earthquakes. Twenty years ago we 
didn't know that historically quiet megathrust faults, like the one that 
ruptured last week, were even capable of giant earthquakes. Fifteen years ago 
we didn't know there would be technology and science to enable the creation of 
a tsunami-warning system. So we are on a slow but steady track of exploring the 
science of earthquakes and tsunamis. The application of this knowledge to human 
welfare, however, is another matter. We have been slow to
 mitigate the hazards of earthquakes because in part we have been slow to make 
scientific discoveries, but we could easily accelerate the pace of discovery if 
our governments and our cultures encouraged young people to work in disciplines 
that advance an understanding of our environments. 

 

We also do a poor job (to borrow Thomas Kuhn's phrase) in re-educating people's 
common sense. What Sri Lankan would have dreamed that giant waves could 
overwhelm her family and change her world forever? We scientists find it 
difficult to convince people that they should be worried about big, powerful 
geologic processes that may happen in their neighborhood tomorrow�or in 10 
generations' time. It's hard to cajole people into worrying about what might 
happen a hundred years hence, when they have a tough job finding time to get 
their daily chores done. In poor countries, living is so hand-to-mouth that 
there is scant time to think about the distant future. 

 

In July and August last year, people on the islands above the megathrust fault 
of western Sumatra were totally surprised to read in our posters and brochures 
that they might experience a devastating earthquake and tsunami. No one there 
had ever known of such things. But they listened when we told them that such 
events had occurred in 1797, 1833 and 1861. I am hopeful that when we revisit 
the islands, we will find those we spoke to alive, even if they are without 
homes or infrastructure. Hopefully, when the tsunami waves came, our friends 
took our advice and ran to high ground. 

 

So what can my colleagues and I do now to apply what we're learning about 
Sumatran earthquakes and tsunamis? Should we expand our fledgling network of 
instruments to see how the part of the fault that ruptured on Dec. 26 "talks" 
to its neighbors and how its wounds will be healing over the next few decades? 
Might we learn something that will allow us to forecast more precisely the 
nature of the next large earthquake and tsunami? Whether or not forecasts 
become possible, could such an expanded effort be used to service an 
early-warning system? If we had been able and willing to set up a warning 
system just after the great Sumatran quakes of the 19th century, would we have 
had the persistence of vision to keep it running until last week? 

 

Having long and well-founded visions of the future, based largely on what has 
happened in the past, could prevent much human suffering. Undoubtedly many 
hazards are currently being overlooked. (As a reporter blurted out to me in the 
press room at Caltech after the 1994 Northridge earthquake in Southern 
California: "Just how many unknown faults are there around here, anyway?") If 
we could pour the same financial and intellectual resources into places like 
Aceh and the Bay of Bengal as have gone to the U.S. or Japan, we could go a 
long way toward minimizing the effect of hazards worldwide. 

 

One test of whether humanity acts differently in the next millennium is this: 
Can we marshal the visionary persistence needed to take charge of our future? 
Or will we carry on as we did throughout most of the past�simply reacting to 
tragedies as they happen? If the answer is the second, then there will continue 
to be more tragedies like that of last week. 


---------------------------------

[1] FROM THE JANUARY 10, 2005 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; Posted Monday, January 3, 
2005; 20:00 HKT http://www.time.com/time/asia/covers/501050110/viewpoint.html 


[2] Kerry Sieh is a professor of geology at Caltech's Tectonics Observatory in 
Pasadena, California, and has been studying the giant earthquakes of Sumatra 
for the past decade 




                
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