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![]() ![]() History of New Madrid
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New Madrid Earthquakes: SouthEast MissouriNew Madrid Earthquakes This is a compilation from various sources, all referenced at the bottom of the page.
Survivors reported that the earthquakes caused cracks to open in the earth's surface, the ground to roll in visible waves, and large areas of land to sink or rise. The crew of the New Orleans (the first steamboat on the Mississippi, which was on her maiden voyage) reported mooring to an island only to awake in the morning and find that the island had disappeared below the waters of the Mississippi River. Damage was reported as far away as Charleston, South Carolina, and Washington, D.C. The new Madrid Earthquake caused wide spread damage, extending north to Saint Louis, eastward though Kentucky to present day West Virginia and south and westward into Arkansas. The tremors were felt as far east as Philadeplphis, where it is reported that church bells ran. For days before the first quake, animals fled the areas that would be effected. Passenger pigeons, in great flocks flew southward, deer and other animals attempted to swim the Ohio River. there would be a total of five earthquakes of 8.0 magnitude or higher from December 16, 1811 through February 7, 1812. Right picture: Trees with double sets of roots. Elevated trees left by scooping out of sand by overflowing Mississippi waters south end of Reelfoot Lake. The surface is now about at its original level and the original tree trunk can be seen continuing down to the level of the ground. later the tree was buried by sand to a depth of 5 fett and new roots formed. Still later the sand was removed. New Madrid earthquake. Lake County, Tennessee. 1904. *"The area of strong shaking associated with these shocks is two to three times larger than that of the 1964 Alaska earthquake and 10 times larger than that of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake." *"The first earthquake caused only slight damage to man-made structures, mainly because of the sparse population in the epicentral area. The extent of the area that experienced damaging earth motion is estimated to be 600,000 square kilometers. However, shaking strong enough to alarm the general population occurred over an area of 2.5 million square kilometers." *At the onset of the earthquake the ground rose
and fell - bending the trees until their branches intertwined and
opening deep cracks in the ground. Landslides swept down the
steeper bluffs and hillslides; large areas of land were uplifted;
and still larger areas sank and were covered with water that
emerged through fissures or craterlets. Huge waves on the
Mississippi River overwhelmed many boats and washed others high
on the shore. High banks caved and collapsed into the river; sand
bars and points of islands gave way; whole islands disappeared.
Surface rupturing did not occur, however. The region most
seriously affected was characterized by raised or sunken lands,
fissures, sinks, sand blows, and large landslides that covered an
area of 78,000 - 129,000 square kilometers, extending from Cairo,
Illinois, to Memphis, Tennessee, and from Crowleys Ridge to
Chickasaw Bluffs, Tennessee.
The central Mississippi Valley is the most
earthquake-prone region of the United States east of the Rocky
Mountains. Crosses show the locations of the many earthquakes
recorded in the New Madrid seismic zone since 1974. *****************************
Isoseismal map for the Arkansas earthquake of December 16,1811*Photos from the Earth Science Photographs from the U.S. Geological Survey Library, by Joseph K. McGregor and Carl Abston, U.S. Geological Survey Digital Data Series DDS-21, 1995. *Abridged from Seismicity of the United States, 1568-1989 (Revised), by Carl W. Stover and Jerry L. Coffman, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1527, United States Government Printing Office, Washington: 1993. USGS-authored or produced data and information are in the public domain. | |