Shortly after 2 o'clock on the morning of December 16, 1811, the
Mississippi River valley was convulsed by an earthquake so severe
that it awakened people in cities as distant at Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, and Norfolk, Virginia. This shock inaugurated what
must have been the most frightening sequence of earthquakes ever to
occur in the United States. Intermittent strong shaking continued
through March 1812 and aftershocks strong enough to be felt occurred
through the year 1817. The initial earthquake of December 16 was
followed by two other principal shocks, one on January 23, 1812, and
the other on February 7, 1812. Judging from newspaper accounts of
damage to buildings, the February 7 earthquake was the biggest of
the three.
In the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys the earthquakes did
much more than merely awaken sleepers. The scene was one of
devastation in an area which is now the southeast part of Missouri,
the northeast part of Arkansas, the southwest part of Kentucky, and
the northwest part of Tennessee. Reelfoot Lake, in the northwest
corner of Tennessee, stands today as evidence of the might of these
great earthquakes. Stumps of trees killed by the sudden submergence
of the ground can still be seen in Reelfoot Lake.
Uplift of over 3 meters was reported at one locality several
hundred kilometers to the southwest of the epicentral zone where a
lake formed by the St. Francis River had its water replaced by sand.
Numerous dead fish were found in the former lake bottom. Large
fissures, so wide that they could not be crossed on horseback, were
formed in the soft alluvial ground. The earthquake made previously
rich prairie land unfit for farming because of deep fissures, land
subsidence which converted good fields to swamps, and numerous sand
blows which covered the ground with sand and mud. The heavy damage
inflicted on the land by these earthquakes led Congress to pass in
1815 the first disaster relief act providing the landowners of
ravaged ground with an equal amount of land in unaffected regions.
Some of the most dramatic effects of the earthquakes occurred
along rivers. Entire islands disappeared, banks caved into the
rivers, and fissures opened and closed in the river beds. Water
spouting from these fissures produced large waves in the river. New
sections of river channel were formed and old channels cut off. Many
boats were capsized and an unknown number of people were drowned.
There are some graphic eyewitness descriptions in contemporary
newspapers made by the boatmen caught on the Mississippi River near
Little Prairie, not far from the present-day town of Caruthersville,
Missouri.
Although the total number of deaths resulting from the
earthquakes is unknown, the toll probably was not large because the
area was sparsely populated and because the log cabin type
construction that was prevalent at that time withstood the shaking
very well. Masonry and stone structures did not fare so well,
however, and damage to them was reported at distances of 250
kilometers and more. Chimneys were thrown down in Louisville,
Kentucky, about 400 kilometers from the epicentral area, and were
damaged at distances of 600 kilometers.
Although it is impossible to know the precise epicentral
coordinates of the earthquakes, contemporary accounts of the events
suggest that the epicenter of the December 16 shock was close to the
southern limit of the area of sand blows. The epicenter of the
February 7 shock was closer to the northern limit of the sand blows,
near the town of New Madrid, Missouri. There is not sufficient
information about the second main shock on January 23 to know its
epicenter. Thus the common practice of calling the entire earthquake
sequence the ``New Madrid earthquakes'' is somewhat misleading. From
what is known about the present seismicity of the area, it can be
inferred that their focal depths were probably between 5 and 20
kilometers. The fault plane -- or planes -- on which the Earth
rupture occurred are inferred to have had a NNE - SSW strike
direction, more or less parallel to the Mississippi River.
The felt areas of the three largest earthquakes were extremely
large. They extended south to the gulf coast, southeast to the
Atlantic coast, and northeast to Quebec, Canada. The western
boundary cannot be established owing to a lack of population.
However, it can be estimated that the area of intensity V or greater
effects was approximately 2½ million square kilometers. This can be
contrasted with the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, for which the
area of intensity V or greater effects was about 150,000 square
kilometers. The large difference in felt areas between the
Mississippi Valley and San Francisco earthquakes, which had
approximately the same magnitude and focal depth, can be explained
by differences in attenuation of earthquake waves traveling through
the Earth's outer crust. The crust in the Western United States
tends to ``soak up'' earthquake energy, whereas in the central and
eastern regions of the country the seismic energy experiences a much
lower rate of absorption. Quantitative studies of recent earthquakes
confirm this explanation.
Invariably the three questions that are asked when one describes
the 1811-12 earthquakes are (1) could such earthquakes occur again,
(2) if so, when will they happen, and (3) what would be the effect
of such an earthquake if it were to occur now?
The answer to whether such earthquakes can happen again is yes.
Field studies by M. L. Fuller of the United States Geological Survey
published in 1912, provided topographic and geological evidence of
large magnitude earthquakes predating the 1811-12 sequence. This
evidence included ground cracks as large as any caused by the
1811-12 earthquakes in which trees fully 200 years old grew from the
bottoms and slopes. Indications of more recent faults and of
sandstone dikes filling old earthquake cracks were also found by
Fuller. Futhermore, studies of the seismicity since 1812 show that
the region is behaving in a manner more or less typical of active
seismic zones.
The second question -- when will another great earthquake happen
-- is much more difficult to answer. Extrapolation of magnitude and
intensity recurrence curves is presently the only method of
prediction available, but this is full of difficulties because the
earthquake record covers far too brief a period of time and because
earthquakes do not follow an exact cyclical pattern. Although
extrapolations of recurrence curves for the region indicate return
periods -- depending on the investigator -- of anywhere between
about 400 to 1,000 years for an earthquake the size of the December
16, 1811 event, there is a possibility that such an earthquake might
occur as soon as next year or as late as several thousand years
hence.
It is easier to speculate on the effects that an earthquake the
size of the 1811-12 series would have if it were to occur today than
it is to predict when it will happen. In the epicentral area, a
repeat of the kind of surficial damage experienced in 1811-12 can
expected. However, this would result in a much greater loss of life
and property today because of the much larger number of people and
man-made structures in the region than were there 162 years ago.
Even more awesome is the size of the area that would be affected.
The dispersion of the surface waves, combined with their low
attenuation, would result in a large amplitude, long duration
sinusoidal type of motion with periods in the same range as the
natural periods of tall buildings. Although damage to buildings
located outside of the immediate earthquake zone would be mostly
nonstructural in character, the monetary amount should be expected
to be very large. The emotional and psychological effects of a large
earthquake in the central part of the country would probably also be
considerable, particularly if the earthquake had a long aftershock
pattern as the 1811-12 sequence did.
Perhaps the greatest danger of all arises from the sense of
complacency, or perhaps total ignorance, about the potential threat
of a large earthquake. The frequency of occurrence of earthquakes
the size of those that took place in 1811-12 is very low; however,
continuing minor to moderate seismic activity in the central
Mississippi Valley area is an indication that a large magnitude
tremor can someday be expected there again.
Earthquake Information Bulletin, Volume 6, Number 2, March -
April 1974, by Otto W. Nuttli.