Raises the Question: Where Will the Next Great Urban Earthquake Strike? In his new book, Earthquake Time Bombs, Yeats discusses the importance of convincing the public to take action before an earthquake strikes their city and that the next damaging earthquake will help drive change
NEW YORK, N.Y. – February 3, 2016 – There is no exact science to predicting when the next earthquake will strike.
But Bob Yeats, a retired emeritus professor of geology at Oregon State University is using his geological background to sound the alarm about where the next significant seismic threat could happen so that we can protect our vulnerable cities before it’s too late.
In his new book, Earthquake Time Bombs, now available in hardcover from Cambridge University Press ($29.99), Yeats reveals the world’s most dangerous earthquake hotspots, the communities at risk, and how we can mitigate the effects of future disasters.
Catastrophic earthquake forecasting isn’t an exact science but earthquake expert Yeats has previous experience when it comes to the timely and prescient prediction of significant seismic threats.
In a media interview in January 2010, he sounded the alarm on Port-au-Prince, Haiti, as an ‘earthquake time bomb’, a region at critical risk of major seismic activity. One week later, a catastrophic magnitude-7 earthquake struck the city, leaving over 100,000 dead and triggering a humanitarian crisis.
No one could have predicted the exact timing of the Haiti earthquake, but by analyzing its proximity to an active fault and its earthquake history, Yeats was able to point out the severity of the threat to Port-au-Prince.
Earthquake Time Bombs: Kabul, Afghanistan / Tehran, Iran / Damascus & Aleppo, both Syria / Beirut, Lebanon / Jerusalem, Israel /Istanbul, Turkey / Caracas, Venezuela / Guantánamo, Cuba / Dhaka, Bangladesh / Chandigarh, India /Islamabad‐Rawalpindi, Pakistan / Nairobi, Kenya / Yangon, Mandalay & Naypyidaw, all Burma (Myanmar) /Los Angeles & San Francisco & Seattle, United States / Tokyo, Japan / Athens, Greece / Christchurch, New Zealand / L’Aquila, Italy.
He examines these seismic threats in the context of recent cultural history, including economic development, national politics, and international conflicts and he draws comparisons between the capacity of first‐world and developing‐world countries to prepare for the inevitable.
The killer combinations of mass migration to megacities coupled with poor building standards is explored, while descriptions of emerging seismic resilience plans from some cities around the world provide a more hopeful picture.
Earthquake Time Bombs is essential reading for politicians, policymakers, infrastructure and emergency planners, scientists, the media, and anyone living in the real or metaphorical shadow of an earthquake.
Praise for Earthquake Time Bombs
“Yeats provides the proverbial wake‐up call for earthquake‐prone major cities around the world. History, politics, economics, and seismology are interwoven to demonstrate the unique challenges each city faces, as well as the lessons to be shared with the others.”
-Mark Benthien, Southern California Earthquake Center
Yeats’ book, Earthquake Time Bombs is available in hardcover ($29.99 US) from Cambridge University Press. 361 pages. The book contains 61 black & white illustrations. [ISBN: 9781107085244].
About the Author
Robert Yeats is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Geological Society of America. He is a senior consultant and partner in Earth Consultants International, an international firm focusing on earthquake hazards, and also an Emeritus Professor at Oregon State University, where an endowed professorship has been named in his honor. He has decades of experience in earthquake geology worldwide, including acting as chair of an active fault working group of the International Lithosphere Program for several years and writing four previous books: Geology of Earthquakes (with Kerry Sieh and Clarence R. Allen), Living with Earthquakes in California, Living with Earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest, and Active Faults of the World.
About Cambridge University Press
Cambridge University Press dates from 1534 and is part of the University of Cambridge. We further the University’s mission by disseminating knowledge in the pursuit of education, learning and research at the highest international levels of excellence. Playing a leading role in today’s global marketplace, we have over 50 offices around the globe, and we distribute our products to nearly every country in the world. We publish titles written by authors in over 100 different countries.
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