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The Great 1976 Tangshan Earthquake / Eaun Mearns (2021, cop. 2021)
Titre : The Great 1976 Tangshan Earthquake : Learning from the 1966-1976 Chinese Prediction Program Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Eaun Mearns, Auteur ; Didier Sornette (1957-....), Auteur Editeur : Newcastle-upon-Tyne : Cambridge Scholars Publishing Année de publication : 2021, cop. 2021 Importance : 1 vol. (xvi-194p.) Présentation : ill. en coul., cartes, couv. ill. en coul. Format : 21 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-5275-7164-8 Note générale : ISBN : 1-5275-7164-5 .- PPN 260225843 Langues : Anglais (eng) Tags : Séisme de Tangshan (1976) Risques sismiques -- Chine Séismes -- Prévision -- Chine Tangshan Earthquake, China, 1976 Earthquake prediction -- China Earthquake hazard analysis -- China Index. décimale : 551.220 112 Tremblements de terre - Prévisions Résumé : From 1966 to 1976, four large earthquakes shook the Bohai Bay rift basin of Northeast China. This prompted the Chinese to launch one of the world’s largest social and science experiments into earthquake prediction that would engage tens of thousands of common people. The climax of this came in February 1975 where a prediction was made hours before the Haicheng earthquake struck. Evacuation of the city of Yingkou and some rural districts saved thousands of lives. The Chinese were jubilant, believing they had cracked the earthquake prediction conundrum. Eighteen months later, however, on the 28th July, 1976, jubilation turned to despair when a great earthquake flattened the large industrial city of Tangshan resulting in 250,000 to 650,000 casualties. This book describes the geological, technical, political and sociological backgrounds to the Haicheng prediction success and the Tangshan prediction failure. Ahead of the Tangshan earthquake, Chinese seismologists had accumulated significant information that suggested an earthquake was imminent and came close to making a prediction. With improved knowledge and vastly improved ability to accumulate, consolidate and analyse data, this book suggests that Tangshan could have been predicted today using techniques developed in China in that epic decade of discovery. Building on these insights, it also offers a viable future pathway towards earthquake predictions that combines the insights and organisation of the 1966-1976 Chinese prediction program with modern technologies, in order to facilitate data gathering, interpretation and sharing. (source : site web de l'éditeur) Note de contenu : Bibliogr. p. [187]-194 The Great 1976 Tangshan Earthquake : Learning from the 1966-1976 Chinese Prediction Program [texte imprimé] / Eaun Mearns, Auteur ; Didier Sornette (1957-....), Auteur . - Newcastle-upon-Tyne : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2021, cop. 2021 . - 1 vol. (xvi-194p.) : ill. en coul., cartes, couv. ill. en coul. ; 21 cm.
ISBN : 978-1-5275-7164-8
ISBN : 1-5275-7164-5 .- PPN 260225843
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Tags : Séisme de Tangshan (1976) Risques sismiques -- Chine Séismes -- Prévision -- Chine Tangshan Earthquake, China, 1976 Earthquake prediction -- China Earthquake hazard analysis -- China Index. décimale : 551.220 112 Tremblements de terre - Prévisions Résumé : From 1966 to 1976, four large earthquakes shook the Bohai Bay rift basin of Northeast China. This prompted the Chinese to launch one of the world’s largest social and science experiments into earthquake prediction that would engage tens of thousands of common people. The climax of this came in February 1975 where a prediction was made hours before the Haicheng earthquake struck. Evacuation of the city of Yingkou and some rural districts saved thousands of lives. The Chinese were jubilant, believing they had cracked the earthquake prediction conundrum. Eighteen months later, however, on the 28th July, 1976, jubilation turned to despair when a great earthquake flattened the large industrial city of Tangshan resulting in 250,000 to 650,000 casualties. This book describes the geological, technical, political and sociological backgrounds to the Haicheng prediction success and the Tangshan prediction failure. Ahead of the Tangshan earthquake, Chinese seismologists had accumulated significant information that suggested an earthquake was imminent and came close to making a prediction. With improved knowledge and vastly improved ability to accumulate, consolidate and analyse data, this book suggests that Tangshan could have been predicted today using techniques developed in China in that epic decade of discovery. Building on these insights, it also offers a viable future pathway towards earthquake predictions that combines the insights and organisation of the 1966-1976 Chinese prediction program with modern technologies, in order to facilitate data gathering, interpretation and sharing. (source : site web de l'éditeur) Note de contenu : Bibliogr. p. [187]-194 Réservation
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