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Canada 'could expect' massive earthquake at any time

A Hydro Quebec worker navigates a causeway where a section of road collapsed following an earthquake in Bowman, Que., Wednesday, June 23, 2010. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Senators, parliamentarians and their staff were evacuated from Parliament Buildings following a 5.5 magnitude earthquake in Ottawa, Wednesday, June 23, 2010. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS)
A Hydro Quebec worker navigates a causeway where a section of road collapsed following an earthquake in Bowman, Que., Wednesday, June 23, 2010. (Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Date: Wednesday Nov. 9, 2011 5:09 PM ET

OTTAWA — Canada could expect a major earthquake at any time and a top geophysicist says it should prepare itself if it is to avoid the kind of disasters that befell Japan, Italy and China in recent years.

John Cassidy, head of earthquake seismology at the Geological Survey of Canada, says large earthquakes have hit parts of Canada numerous times -- and will again.

"Certainly we could expect an earthquake at any time and should be prepared for a large earthquake at any time in Canada," Cassidy said in an interview prior to delivering a lecture at Carleton University.

"We've seen many over the years, going back in time."

He says the most vulnerable region is the West Coast, which has been hit with giant, magnitude-9.0 quakes 13 times in the last 6,000 years, the last of them 311 years ago.

B.C. is in the window in which a massive earthquake is more likely to occur, he says, but he acknowledges that window spans 200 to 850 years.

Predicting earthquakes with any degree of consistency, Cassidy says, remains next to impossible.

"Unfortunately, we cannot predict earthquakes, either here or anywhere," he said. "There's no consistent, successful way to predict exactly when earthquakes will occur and how large."

The only thing people can do is be prepared, he says.

Canada is identifying vulnerable areas, estimating potential magnitude, frequency and type of quakes. Using that information, planners can draft appropriate building codes and construct quake-resistant infrastructure to minimize the damage.

"Our real protection from earthquakes are earthquake-hazard maps that are improving over time as we learn more about earthquakes, where they occur and how large they can be."

Training is also important, he stresses. Fatalities from the magnitude-8.8 quake in Chile were kept to a minimum in February 2010 because people knew what to do, he said.

It may seem like there have been more major quakes worldwide in recent years, but Cassidy says that's more perception than reality.

It's true that there have been three 8.8-magnitude quakes in seven years -- in Sumatra, Chile and Japan -- the biggest tremors since the 1960s.

But he says the perception is also due to the fact that some other quakes, like those which struck Christchurch, New Zealand last year and L'Aquila, Italy in 2009, hit close to major centres, maximizing damage.

Besides the West Coast, other seismic hotspots in Canada include the Ottawa and St. Lawrence valleys, the North Atlantic off Cape Breton and the Arctic off Baffin Island.

The quietest seismic region incorporates Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Northern Ontario.

Comments are now closed for this story

Mike
said
0 0

So the point of this article was to say that, potentially, another earthquake may take another 500 years, could hit ANYWHERE in Canada, and that because previous earthquakes have hit cities in other countries that there is some relation to them hitting cities here? Um, Im not sure if this was the old opening script to "The Day After Tomorrow" or if CTV is just trying to increase FEAR in all of Canada. Great 'news' article. If you could call it that.


Sparky
said
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Earthquake on the west coast.... ocean front property in Calgary?


Richard
said
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Do people in these areas do earthquake drills?


Go Sask
said
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Another reason to move to Sask ! High Employment rates and Low Earthquake rates ;)


Islander
said
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I live on Vancouver Island 60 feet ASL, me thinks it's time to move to Sask.


Pugfire
said
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I agree that a massive earthquake can and will happen in Canada, but given that, as the article says, the WHERE is impossible to predict as is the WHEN. I'm sure every emergency organization would be happy to prepare and the government would be prepared to spend almost any amount, BUT one cannot adequately preposition supplies or prepare anything else for something that one cannot reasonably predict.If one assembled a huge amount of materials to deal with a quake and held it in readiness, Murphy's Law dictates that the quake's epicenter would be directly under the supply warehouses, ruining everything.


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