[Rockhounds] Why earthquake predictions are usually wrong
Kreigh Tomaszewski
kreigh at gmail.com
Sat Mar 22 09:34:04 PDT 2025
Brent Dmitruk calls himself an earthquake predictor.
In mid-October, he told his tens of thousands of social media followers
that an earthquake would soon hit at the westernmost point of California,
south of the small coastal city of Eureka.
Two months later, a magnitude 7.3 struck the site in northern California -
putting millions under a tsunami warning and growing Mr Dmitruk's following
online as they turned to him to forecast the next one.
"So to people who dismiss what I do, how can you argue it's just a
coincidence. It requires serious skill to figure out where earthquakes will
go," he said on New Year's Eve.
But there's one problem: earthquakes can't be predicted, scientists who
study them say.
It's exactly that unpredictability that makes them so unsettling. Millions
of people living on the west coast of North America fear that "the big one"
could strike at any moment, altering landscapes and countless lives.
With some 100,000 earthquakes felt worldwide each year, according to the US
Geological Survey (USGS), it is understandable that people want to have
warning.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c247jq391npo
More information about the Rockhounds
mailing list