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Separating five facts from earthquake fiction in “San Andreas,” the movie

College of Science seismological lab director offers science-grounded view of Hollywood disaster film

sandoval in earthquake engineering lab

Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval toured this two-story building in the earthquake engineering lab before the final high acceleration tests on nonstructural components. The full-scale building was built atop three large, hydraulically driven shake tables.

Separating five facts from earthquake fiction in “San Andreas,” the movie

College of Science seismological lab director offers science-grounded view of Hollywood disaster film

Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval toured this two-story building in the earthquake engineering lab before the final high acceleration tests on nonstructural components. The full-scale building was built atop three large, hydraulically driven shake tables.

sandoval in earthquake engineering lab

Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval toured this two-story building in the earthquake engineering lab before the final high acceleration tests on nonstructural components. The full-scale building was built atop three large, hydraulically driven shake tables.

The latest disaster movie, San Andreas, has drawn considerable attention, especially when coupled with the real-life earthquake disaster that struck Nepal April 25 and the magnitude 4.8 gentle-reminder earthquake 100 miles north of Las Vegas that rattled homes and highways throughout the valley on May 22.

"As a couple of our graduate students can attest, after recently riding out the magnitude 7.3 earthquake 'aftershock' in Katmandu, even with their poor building standards, destruction in Nepal looked nothing like that seen in San Andreas," Graham Kent, director of the ƼӰԭ's Nevada Seismological Laboratory, said. "Predictably, for a disaster movie, San Andreas exaggerates for the audience which, as a seismologist, can be a good thing, as it wakes people up to the real-life dangers facing those along fault lines."

San Andreas doesn't disappoint. With back-to-back disasters, starting in Nevada, the earthquake works its way from southern Nevada's Hoover Dam to Los Angeles then on to San Francisco.

Hollywood has decided to go "wall-to-wall" and depict a rupture of the entire San Andreas Fault, which extends from near the Mexican border to almost Oregon. Kent notes that in reality this has not been seen before, and although nothing is ruled impossible, this is a highly unlikely scenario given the past records of both historic and paleo-earthquakes. And, based on this history, the magnitude would be closer to magnitude 8.3, not magnitude 9.6.

"Although criticism of San Andreas from scientific circles is a certainty, as state seismologist for Nevada, with responsibility for monitoring Nevada and parts of Eastern California, I welcome this movie and hope it marks the beginning of a serious conversation regarding the real consequences of a large earthquake in modern America," Kent, who teaches in the University's , said. "Whatever the scientific flaws of San Andreas, and they are plenty, the consequences of a large urban earthquake with up to billions of dollars of damage and thousands of deaths remain unnerving."

Of course, Hollywood paints a bigger-than-life picture, and plays with the truth in order to entertain.

"Nevertheless, the action scenes kept us riveted, my wife was on the edge of her seat," Kent said. "It was a great movie."

Kent has separated fact from fiction by outlining five truths about the depictions in San Andreas:

(1)   The Trigger: Can a large earthquake in Nevada trigger the San Andreas Fault or knock down Hoover Dam like in the movie?  Western Nevada and Eastern California occupy the Walker Lane that has some fault lines that are capable of up to about magnitude 7.5 quakes (just not near Hoover Dam). Larger Nevada earthquakes can trigger other regional earthquakes as happened, in reverse, in 1992 when the magnitude 7.3 Landers quake in eastern California likely triggered the magnitude 5.7 Little Skull Mountain earthquake north of Las Vegas about a day later. But the San Andreas Fault? Not likely.

(2)   The Tsunami: Will a towering earthquake-generated tsunami inundate California? Most of the San Andreas Fault is landlocked and when it heads offshore, it occupies shallow waters. In the 1906 earthquake a less than a half-meter wave was generated. Strong shaking could trigger landslides offshore that could spawn a tsunami, which appears to have happened after an 1812 earthquake near Santa Barbara, which resulted in a tsunami wave several meters in height. In either case, not a towering mega-tsunami that inundates coastlines and upends a container ship into a bridge.

(3)   The Crevasse: Most large earthquakes with ground rupture have associated tension cracks that can, at times, get large enough to place an arm into, a far cry from the chasm seen in San Andreas. The San Andreas Fault will not swallow up cars, people or buildings.

(4)   East Coast Shakeup: Will the East Coast feel a West Coast earthquake as the movie San Andreas portrays? The East Coast gets to sit out this event in terms of ground shaking from a large West Coast earthquake. But the "bill" from the next major San Andreas quake will shake up politicians as death tolls rise and damages estimated at $200 billion or more from a real major earthquake begin to roll in.

(5)   Nothing Left Standing:  Will California's skyscrapers collapse? Ian Buckle, a civil engineering professor in the University's College of Engineering, shakes large structures for a living with huge shake tables in the world renowned Earthquake Engineering Laboratory. "The tall modern buildings, like the 50-story buildings built of steel, should do quite well," Buckle said. "They will give a scary ride, they'll move a lot but they should not collapse." Here's a prediction from Kent: most fatalities, injuries and damage with future U.S. earthquakes will be focused on unreinforced masonry (URMs) buildings and soft-story structures. A far cry from scenes in the movie where cities are leveled.

"As a seismologist and director of the , and a fan of really good movies, my hope is Dwayne Johnson, the actor known as 'The Rock' delivers a good blockbuster hit that does not resemble Hollywood's 2003 science fiction flop 'The Core' in any way, shape or form," Kent said. "After watching the movie, I'd say it has great potential, but as a seismologist, I try to stay away from most predictions."

While the movie stretches the truth to nearly the breaking point, it serves a purpose for seismologists wanting to educate the public about the earthquake potential in their communities and how to prepare and respond in an earthquake.

"It was good to see the message of 'drop, cover and hold-on,' which we've been promoting for several years through the Great Shakeout, presented several times," Kent said.

The is a national public earthquake drill that provides preparedness information and an opportunity to participate in the world's largest earthquake drill. Kent spearheads the ShakeOut exercise in Nevada through the .

"We make a lot of headway in educating and preparing millions of people with the Great ShakeOut, but a movie like this can really help build awareness to earthquake hazards," Kent said.

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