Museum’s Earth Bulletin Documents Geological Fieldwork in Post-Quake Haiti
Wednesday, July 20 10:20 am

Understanding the geologic composition is key to designing safer buildings in Haiti’s Port-au-Prince. Photo: © AMNH.
In the wake of the devastating earthquake that struck Haiti last year, a group of U.S. scientists flew to Port-au-Prince to complete the first technical survey of the city’s geology. A film crew from Science Bulletins, the Museum’s innovative online and exhibition program, joined them to document the fieldwork, producing an Earth Bulletin now on view in the David S. and Ruth L. Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth and online on the Museum’s website.
“The earthquake in Haiti was such a momentous event that we felt we had to talk about the science behind it,” says Edmond Mathez, curator in the Museum’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and the curator for Earth Bulletins.
Hundreds of thousands of Haiti’s earthquake victims died in building collapses, but not simply because of poor construction or materials. A huge hurdle to mitigating seismic hazards in Haiti has been that builders worked without information about the area’s underlying rock. Different rock types will magnify the shaking of a quake to different degrees, so understanding the geologic composition of an earthquake zone is crucial to designing buildings that can compensate for those effects. But as of 2010, no modern geologic map of Port-au-Prince existed. Read more »


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