El and Bill
New member
Jim States asked me awhile ago, in the pub, about tsunami hazard in the South Puget Sound area. Yes, there is a significant hazard and there have been tsunamis there - significant ones in the past.
This is not an area where I have done geological research or earthquake hazard assessment, so I suggest the best information I could find is in the following document:
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/pubs/PDF/gonz2526/gonz2526.pdf
In answer to a specific question Jim asked - there certainly are areas where landslides (submarine, terrestrial, or shoreline) have occurred in the South Puget Sound area, and there is evidence of land subsidence related to these liquefaction or slippage zones. Six to eight feet of vertical subsidence is easily possible. If a large quake occurred, particularly after long periods of rainfall and soil saturation, slippage along sloping areas would undoubtedly occur and much damage to structures built on these slip zones would result.
A geologist friend mapped the shallow geology of San Francisco, and it is his belief that the greatest structural damage in San Francisco when a big quake occurs will be to any structures built on these landslide areas. He mapped them carefully, and I hope that the planning commission there has used the USGS maps when considering construction of homes, other buildings, and highways.
I hope this helps answer your question, Jim.
This is not an area where I have done geological research or earthquake hazard assessment, so I suggest the best information I could find is in the following document:
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/pubs/PDF/gonz2526/gonz2526.pdf
In answer to a specific question Jim asked - there certainly are areas where landslides (submarine, terrestrial, or shoreline) have occurred in the South Puget Sound area, and there is evidence of land subsidence related to these liquefaction or slippage zones. Six to eight feet of vertical subsidence is easily possible. If a large quake occurred, particularly after long periods of rainfall and soil saturation, slippage along sloping areas would undoubtedly occur and much damage to structures built on these slip zones would result.
A geologist friend mapped the shallow geology of San Francisco, and it is his belief that the greatest structural damage in San Francisco when a big quake occurs will be to any structures built on these landslide areas. He mapped them carefully, and I hope that the planning commission there has used the USGS maps when considering construction of homes, other buildings, and highways.
I hope this helps answer your question, Jim.