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Distributed for Reaktion Books

Earthquake

Nature and Culture

The 2011 devastating, tsunami-triggering quake off the coast of Japan and 2010’s horrifying destruction in Haiti reinforce the fact that large cities in every continent are at risk from earthquakes. Quakes threaten Los Angeles, Beijing, Cairo, Delhi, Singapore, and many more cities, and despite advances in earthquake science and engineering and improved disaster preparedness by governments and international aid agencies, they continue to cause immense loss of life and property damage.
 
Earthquake explores the occurrence of major earthquakes around the world, their effects on the societies where they strike, and the other catastrophes they cause, from landslides and fires to floods and tsunamis. Examining the science involved in measuring and explaining earthquakes, Andrew Robinson looks at our attempts to design against their consequences and the possibility of having the ability to predict them one day. Robinson also delves into the ways nations have mythologized earthquakes through religion and the arts—Norse mythology explained earthquakes as the violent struggling of the god Loki as he was punished for murdering another god, the ancient Greeks believed Poseidon caused earthquakes whenever he was in a bad mood or wanted to punish people, and Japanese mythology states that Namazu, a giant catfish, triggers quakes when he thrashes around. He discusses the portrayal of earthquakes in popular culture, where authors and filmmakers often use the memory of cities laid to waste—such as Kobe, Japan, in 1995 or San Francisco in 1906—or imagine the hypothetical “Big One,” the earthquake expected someday out of California’s San Andreas Fault.
 
With tremors happening in seemingly implausible places like Chicago and Washington DC, Earthquake is a timely book that will enrich earthquake scholarship and enlighten anyone interested in these ruinous natural disasters.

208 pages | 60 color plates, 40 halftones | 5 4/5 x 8 1/4 | © 2012

Earth

Earth Sciences: General Earth Sciences


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Reviews

“Studying earthquakes is somewhat like the apocryphal medical school dean who tells students: ‘Half of what we will teach you in the next four years is wrong. The problem is that we don’t know which half.’ Robinson conveys this spirit in a lively and well-written introduction to earthquakes and how people discovered, struggle to understand, and try to figure out how to deal with this dramatic, destructive, and still poorly understood phenomenon.”

Seth Stein, author of Disaster Deferred

 “One of the startling illustrations in this lively account is a relief on a Pompeiian house of destruction caused by a quake in AD62. Nero said the city should be abandoned. It was, 17 years later.”

The Independent

Table of Contents

1. Earth-shattering Events
2. Lisbon, 1755: The Wrath of God
3. Seismology Begins
4. Tokyo, 1923: Holocaust
5. Measuring Earthquakes
6. Faults, Plates and Drifting Continents
7. California: The Enigma of the San Andreas Fault
8. Prediction of the Unpredictable
9. Designing against Death

Earthquake Timeline
References
Select Bibliography
Associations and Websites
Photo Acknowledgements
Index

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