Midwest Not Immune To Earthquakes 

Release Date: January 16, 2002
Release Number: R7-02-02

» 2002 Region VII News Releases

Kansas City, MO -- Recent earthquake activity in the New Madrid Seismic Zone serves as a gentle reminder that earthquakes can occur in the Midwest. During the month of December, ten minor earthquakes were recorded in the New Madrid Seismic Zone.

The New Madrid Fault, which runs from northeast Arkansas to southern Illinois, through the Missouri Bootheel, was the site of the three largest earthquakes in North America during the winter of 1811-1812. Missouri's Bootheel region experiences approximately 200-250 minor tremors annually.

The Nemaha Fault, long thought to be inactive, runs from Wichita, Kan., north under Manhattan and Topeka, Kan., to Lincoln, Neb., with a branch that runs under St. Joseph, Mo. Residents of rural northwest Missouri occasionally report tremors. Small earthquakes were reported in 2001 by residents of Oberlin and Augusta, Kan.

The January 2001 Gujarat, India earthquake has been designated the deadliest disaster of 2001, killing an estimated 15,500 people.

Events such as the India earthquake should cause communities to re-evaluate their own risk. What would such an earthquake anywhere along the New Madrid or Nemaha faults mean to our region?

Though devastating, earthquakes are survivable. Here are a few preparedness tips you and your family should take before an earthquake occurs:

And here is what you should do if an earthquake does strike:

After the shaking stops:

For additional information, contact Linda Winkler, FEMA Region VII public affairs officer, at (816) 283-7080. Visit the following web sites for preparedness tips and for what to do before, during and after an earthquake:

Last Modified: Wednesday, 27-Aug-2003 14:56:43