Friday, January 17, 2014

Destruction of the Northridge Earthquake:Design of Chinese engineers 17,000-ton flyover section at 90 degrees



The Northridge Earthquake: 20 Years Ago Today

 
On January 17, 1994, at 4:31 am, a magnitude 6.7 earthquake struck the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles, killing more than 60, injuring more than 9,000, and causing widespread damage. Freeways crumbled, gas mains burst and caught fire, apartment complexes collapsed, and power was lost to vast sections of the city. Thousands of buildings were either destroyed outright, or declared unsafe to enter, and later demolished. Twenty years later, here is a look back, in photos. [30 photos]
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Cars lie smashed by the collapsed Interstate 5 connector few hours after Northridge earthquake, on January 17, 1994, in Sylmar, California. The magnitude 6.7 Northridge Earthquake occurred on January 17, 1994 at 4:31 AM, killing more than 60, injuring more than 9,000, and causing widespread damage throughout the west San Fernando Valley. (Jonathan Nourok/AFP/Getty Images)
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A portion of the Santa Monica Freeway near La Cienega in Los Angeles, damaged due to a major earthquake early Monday morning, January 17, 1994. (AP Photo/Lois Bernstein) #
3
Spectators watch a building burn amid glass shards and other rubble in the Sherman Oaks area of Los Angeles in the early morning hours of January 17, 1994, following a major earthquake that hit Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jerome Henkel) #
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Gas from a ruptured supply line burns as water from broken water main floods Balboa Boulevard in the Granada Hills area of Los Angeles, on January 17, 1994. The fire from the gas main destroyed two homes. ( AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi) #
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A tractor trailer and camper are abandoned on a span of eastbound state Route 14 near Sylmar, California, on January 18, 1994.(AP Photo/Doug Pizac) #
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A crashed vehicle sits against part of the Santa Monica Freeway that separated during a severe earthquake, on January 17, 1994.(AP Photo/Lois Bernstein) #
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This January 17, 1994 photo shows the covered body of Los Angeles Police Officer Clarence Wayne Dean, 46, near his motorcycle which plunged off the State Highway 14 overpass that collapsed onto Interstate 5, an interchange that is now named in his memory. Dean was reporting to work in the predawn darkness and apparently never saw the collapsed bridge. (AP Photo/Doug Pizac) #
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A gas main on fire throws flames into the air after it broke and exploded destroying nearby homes following the Northridge earthquake, on January 17, 1994. There were a total of 466 fires reported on January 17, three of them simultaneously broke out immediately following the earthquake and were due of the rupture of natural gas valves and/or mains. (Hal Garb/AFP/Getty Images) #
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A portion of the outfield structure at Anaheim Stadium collapsed after a severe earthquake hit the Los Angeles area, on January 17, 1994.(AP Photo/Ben Margot) #
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Ray Hudson reacts as a friend's home goes up in flames at the Oak Ridge Trailer Park in Sylmar, California, after a major earthquake, on January 17, 1994. (AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac) #
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Steel-reinforced concrete support beams damaged by the 1994 earthquake. (USGS Photo) #
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Men inspect damage to cars and apartment complex after Northridge earthquake, on January 21, 1994, in Canoga, California.(Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images) #
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Damage from the January 1994 Northridge Earthquake sustained by the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. (Stephen Dunn/Getty Images) #
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The parking structure at the Northridge Fashion Center in the South San Fernando Valley, collapsed after a severe earthquake struck, on January 17, 1994. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon) #
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A Los Angeles police officer stands in front of the Northridge Meadows Apartment building, after the upper floors of the structure collapsed onto the open garages and first story, killing 16 people, on January 17, 1994. (AP Photo/Chuck Jackson) #
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Iran Ashtari and his wife Emani eat dinner among their belongings in front of their quake-damaged apartment on January 17, 1994.(Tim Clary/AFP/Getty Images) #
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University of California, Northridge, students walk by a parking structure that was heavily damaged on the CSUN campus in the January 17 earthquake. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill) #
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Medical personal work a triage unit outside Olive View Medical Center in Sylmar, California, to help some of the dozens of people injured in the earthquake, on January 17, 1994. (AP Photo/Douglas C.Pizac) #
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A portion of the Bullock's department store in the Northridge Fashion Center, collapsed after the Northridge earthquake, on January 17, 1994. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon) #
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Octogenarian Art Mahony sleeps at the Red Cross shelter set up in the Santa Clarita, California, Boys and Girls Club, on January 18, 1994. Many people forced from their homes by the previous day's earthquake sought out shelters to get a night's rest.(AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) #
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People left homeless by the Northridge earthquake line up in Canoga Park, California, to make phone calls at a mobile telephone facility, on January 22, 1994. Thousands of people affected by the 17 January earthquake lived in cars and tents for days after, rather than risk another earthquake in their homes. (Mike Nelson/AFP/Getty Images) #
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Bricks and debris surround a building housing Ara's Pastry on Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles, on January 17, 1994.(AP Photo/Rene Macura) #
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The glow of a house fire and the reflection of lights on a fire truck gives an unearthly look to firefighters fighting a blaze in the 18000 block of Prairie Street in the Northridge section of Los Angeles, on January 18, 1994. Many houses and businesses burned as a result of gas leaks and sparking electrical wires as power was turned back on even as aftershocks to Monday's 6.6 earthquake continued to roll through the area. (AP Photo/Mark Terrill) #
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Imuez Rodrigues, left, and Jose Murillo, homeless following Monday's deadly earthquake, huddle around a warm fire at their camp in the Granada Hills area of Los Angeles, on January 19, 1994. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) #
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California National Guardsman Sgt. David Valenzuela, stands guard over the corner of Sherman Way and Reseda in the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles in the early morning of January 18, 1994. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski) #
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Early morning commuters face bumper-to-bumper traffic as they travel the Sierra Highway to avoid the earthquake-damaged Highway 14 and Interstate 5 interchange, on their way to Los Angeles, on January 19, 1994. (AP Photo/Doug Pizac) #
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A construction worker starts to cut up some of the destroyed walls in the courtyard of Northridge Meadow, an apartment complex that collapsed during the Northridge earthquake, on January 24, 1994. (Hal Garb/AFP/Getty Images) #
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A resident and a cameraman look at damage to the Kaiser Permanente Building following the Northridge earthquake, on January 17, 1994.(Hal Garb/AFP/Getty Images) #
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A resident fills a water jug on January 18, 1994, at one of many water lines set up in the area to assist victims of the Northridge earthquake. Local authorities warned residents not to drink tap water after the quake broke many water mains in the area.(Chris Wilkins/AFP/Getty Images) #
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Maria Partlow sifts through the remains of her home that burned after the earthquake in the Granada Hills section of Los Angeles, on January 19, 1994. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)






























 

 

 

 

Now THAT’S a swing bridge! Chinese engineers build 17,000-ton flyover section at 90 degrees so railway below could remain open… then rotate it into place

  • Engineers took 90 minutes to swivel the structure into place in Wuhan City today
  • The section was built separately so as not to disturb the busy high speed railway track beneath it
  • It was the first time the unusual construction technique was used in the country
  • China is home to the largest high speed rail network in the world

Forward-thinking engineers in China are the first in the country to have built a section of an enormous overpass and rotate it into place upon completion so as not to disturb the railways below.
A 17,000 ton part of an elevated motorway was today slowly swung into place in Wuhan City after being constructed independently beside a high speed railway track.
Engineers took 90minutes to carefully swing the 17,000-ton structure into place today above a high speed railway track in Wuhan City, central China
Engineers took 90minutes to carefully swing the 17,000-ton structure into place today above a high speed railway track in Wuhan City, central China
A China Railway High-speed train passes beneath the rotating sector of the bridge today as engineers expertly swivel it into place
A China Railway High-speed train passes beneath the rotating sector of the bridge today as engineers expertly swivel it into place
It was the first time the technique had been used in China, with engineers unable to temporarily halt the busy train service in order to build the bridge in place
It was the first time the technique had been used in China, with engineers unable to temporarily halt the busy train service in order to build the bridge in place
Experts took 90 minutes to connect the section to the rest of the bridge, tuning it 106 degrees on a 15metre high axis.
It was the first time the innovative technique had been used in China.
The country has the world's longest high speed rail network with over 6,200 miles of routes in service in December 2012.
The track beneath the bridge in Wuhan City was considered too important to be temporarily halted in order for engineers' to complete construction.  Once finished, the overpass will be 256m long and span 11 railways, including the 1,428 mile-long Beijing-Guangzhou service.
Experts estimate the bridge will be open to traffic later this month.
The 17,000 structure is slowly brought into place in by engineers after weeks of construction
The 17,000 structure is slowly brought into place in by engineers after weeks of construction
The unusual technique has been used in the UK in the past, though never before in China
The unusual technique has been used in the UK in the past, though never before in China
The 17,000-ton structure was rotated at 106 degrees on a 15metre axis
The 17,000-ton structure was rotated at 106 degrees on a 15metre axis
The sector is connected to the rest of the bridge after 90minutes. Officials estimate it will be open to traffic later this month
The sector is connected to the rest of the bridge after 90minutes. Officials estimate it will be open to traffic later this month
A similar technique was used to construct the Grade I listed Kingsgate Bridge across the River Wear in Durham in 1968.
Designed in 1963 by Sir Ove Arup, the bridge's two halves were built on the river's bank and swung together at 90 degrees.

If a super-eruption were to occur, the blast would launch enough ash into the atmosphere to disrupt weather for years to follow, potentially causing famine, health crisis, and global civil unrest.
And leading up to the catastrophic event, the world would have just one year to prepare.
Researchers have determined this based on a microscopic analysis of quartz crystals in pumice from the Bishop Tuff in California, the site of a super-eruption 760,000 years ago.
In the study, the researchers from Vanderbilt University and the University of Chicago analyzed dozens of small quartz crystals, remnants from the original underground magma, from the Bishop Tuff, pictured above. It is the site of a super-eruption 760,000 years ago
In the study, the researchers from Vanderbilt University and the University of Chicago analyzed dozens of small quartz crystals, remnants from the original underground magma, from the Bishop Tuff, pictured above. It is the site of a super-eruption 760,000 years ago

SUPER-ERUPTION TIMELINE

Around the world, there have been numerous super-eruptions and smaller, yet immensely powerful eruptions in Earth’s recent history. 
The most recent super-eruption, the Oruanui eruption at the Taupo Volcanic Zone in New Zealand, took place 26,500 years ago.
This site also contains deposits from dozens of other massive eruptions in the last few millions of years.
Before the Oruanui, Campi Flegrei in Italy produced a very large eruption 40,000 years ago.
A super-eruption also occured in Indonesia – the Toba super-eruption in Sumatra 75,000 years ago.
In 1815, Indonesia experienced another large event, the Tambora eruption.
In the United States, there have been three super-eruptions in the past two million years.
The researchers say this geological track record indicates another super-eruption is inevitable – though not for quite some time.
The ancient super-eruption in eastern California formed the Long Valley Caldera – a feature that is nearly 20 miles long and 11 miles wide.
In the study, the researchers from Vanderbilt University and the University of Chicago analyzed dozens of small quartz crystals, remnants from the original underground magma, from the Bishop Tuff.
Quartz crystals have distinctive rims, they explain in a paper published to the journal Plos One, and are rich in titanium.
Along with this, they are bright in cathodoluminescence, which allowed them to make high-resolution measurements of variation in the titanium, providing detailed insight on the transition from pre-eruptive crystallization to the decompression and crystallization at the time of the blast.
This analysis helped to determine rim growth times and growth rates – revealing that these processes largely occurred in a span of less than a year.
‘Maximum rim growth times span from approximately 1 minute to 35 years, with a median of approximately 4 days,’ the authors wrote.
‘More than 70 percent of rim growth times are less than 1 year, showing that quartz rims have mostly grown in the days to months prior to eruption...
'Growth took place under conditions of high supersaturation suggesting that rim growth marks the onset of decompression and the transition from pre-eruptive to syn-eruptive conditions.’
It takes tens of thousands of years for the crust to generate enough eruptible magma, but once formed, these unstable magma bodies only last for centuries to a few millennia.
As the decompression occurs, the magma body would likely be expanding as well, having detectable effects at the surface.
The ancient super-eruption in eastern California formed the Long Valley Caldera, pictured above – a feature that is nearly 20 miles long and 11 miles wide
The ancient super-eruption in eastern California formed the Long Valley Caldera, pictured above – a feature that is nearly 20 miles long and 11 miles wide
Quartz crystals, pictured, have distinctive rims and are rich in titanium. Along with this, they are bright in cathodoluminescence, which allowed them to make high-resolution measurements of variation in the titanium. This analysis helped to determine rim growth times and growth rates
Quartz crystals, pictured, have distinctive rims and are rich in titanium. Along with this, they are bright in cathodoluminescence, which allowed them to make high-resolution measurements of variation in the titanium. This analysis helped to determine rim growth times and growth rates
‘The evolution of a giant, super-eruption-feeding magma body is characterized by events taking place at a variety of time scales,’ said Guilherme Gualda, associate professor of earth and environment sciences at Vanderbilt University.
‘Now we have shown that the onset of the process of decompression, which releases the gas bubbles that power the eruption, starts less than a year before the eruption.’
These findings indicate that the signs of a super-eruption would likely be felt within a year of the event, growing stronger as it approached.
But, they say there is still more work to be done to determine what these signs would be.
The most recent super-eruption, the Oruanui eruption at the Taupo Volcanic Zone in New Zealand (pictured), took place 26,500 years ago. Leading up to a catastrophic event of this kind, the world would have just one year to prepare, the new study found
The most recent super-eruption, the Oruanui eruption at the Taupo Volcanic Zone in New Zealand (pictured), took place 26,500 years ago. Leading up to a catastrophic event of this kind, the world would have just one year to prepare, the new study found
Around the world, there have been numerous super-eruptions in Earth’s recent history.
The most recent, the Oruanui eruption at the Taupo Volcanic Zone in New Zealand, took place 26,500 years ago.
Before this, there were massive eruptions in Italy, Indonesia, and the United States, where Yellowstone released three super-eruptions in the last two million years.
And, this geological history indicates another super-eruption is most likely inevitable – though not for quite some time. 
‘As far as we can determine, none of these places currently house the type of melt-rich, giant magma body needed to produce a super-eruption,’ said Gualda.
‘However, they are places where super-eruptions have happened in the past so are more likely to happen in the future.’ 


























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