California prepares for the 'big one'
with earthquake drill
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[October 19, 2017]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Millions of
Californians were due on Thursday to simultaneously drop to the floor,
clamber under tables and cover their heads for a minute or two of
imagined seismic turmoil during the latest annual "Great ShakeOut"
earthquake drill.
The event, first held nine years ago in the Los Angeles area, was
organized by scientists and emergency officials as part of a campaign to
prepare the region's inhabitants for a catastrophic quake that experts
say is inevitable and long overdue.
The exercise has since expanded to encompass all of California and most
other states, as well as some other countries, including Canada and
Japan. In many places, entire school districts, colleges, workplaces and
municipalities have registered to take part.
In keeping with the drill's quake-survival message, participants are
urged to "drop, cover and hold" - meaning get down on hands and knees,
cover their heads and necks under a sturdy piece of furniture and hang
on until the hypothetical shaking stops.
To help participants get into the mood, organizers have even prepared
audio recordings of quake-rumbling sounds that can be downloaded, with
or without narration, and played during the drill.
Such rehearsals are especially important in regions such as Southern
California, where "it's not a matter of if but when that catastrophic
earthquake will strike," said Ken Kondo, spokesman for Los Angeles
County's emergency management office.
One of the larger gatherings planned is to be held at the Natural
History Museum in Exposition Park near downtown Los Angeles.
Following the drill, the city fire department, American Red Cross,
police and other agencies will stage a full-scale earthquake-response
exercise, setting up a medical triage area, emergency shelters and
mass-feeding operation, Kondo said.
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That drill is based on the premise of a magnitude 7.8 quake striking
the southern end of the San Andreas Fault, a subterranean chasm
between two massive plates of the Earth's crust that extends
hundreds of miles across California.
The scenario was devised by geophysicists and engineers who
envisioned a calamity that would leave 1,800 people dead, 50,000
injured and 250,000 homeless while severing highways, power lines,
pipelines, railroads, communications networks and aqueducts, and
toppling some 1,500 buildings.
As of late Wednesday, nearly 53 million participants were registered
for ShakeOut drills worldwide, including more than 10.2 million in
California, organizers said.
The exercise is set to begin at 10:19 a.m. local time, corresponding
with the date of the event.
A rupture of the San Andreas Fault in northern California caused the
massive quake that laid waste to San Francisco in 1906. The last
"big one" to strike south of the San Gabriel Mountains near Los
Angeles was 300 years ago. The average interval between such quakes
in that region is just 150 years, experts say.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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