I-MAG STS Corporation
      
		  
		  From three different readers (translated from Italian): 
		  What do you think of the 
forecast for a major seismic event to strike Rome on May 11?
		  Generally, if all one has is forty to one hundred years of measurements (so 
latitude, longitude and depth of the epicenter as well as Richter and date/time), 
this is not enough information to predict major earthquakes, let alone get close on 
time or location. Part of the problem is that a century is longer than most 
seismologists live, but a blink in geological time. Most seismological data older 
than forty years is fairly suspect in terms of accuracy. However, statistics has 
methods for dealing with this challenge. We look at not only the history of where 
and when events were, but also for areas where they were not. A prevailing theory 
is that tension builds between plates as they move so that, absent an explanation 
like being under a river delta, there should be a increasing chance of a major event 
the longer a fault segment has been increasing tension. Haiti 2010 is often given as 
an example of this. There are problems with determining if smaller earthquakes 
are relieving tension or are foreshocks leading to a larger event. Then there are 
tuples - two or more earthquakes of comparable strength occur very close in space 
and time. Our models compensate for tuples, but have no explanation why they 
happen.
The hundreds of earthquakes between the eastern coast of Honshu and the 
western edge of the Pacific Plate have no known precedent. Nor is it understood 
why there was and is so much activity there as opposed to at plate edges.
The prediction of a major seismic event striking Rome [Italy, just to be clear] May 
11, 2011 seems to originate with Raffaele Bendandi (1893-1979). Bendandi believed 
earthquakes were the result of the combined movements of the planets, the moon 
and the sun and were perfectly predictable. With all due respect to the other 
planets, dwarf planets and asteroids in our Solar System, Earth is really only 
influenced by the Sun and the Moon. But the ultimate regression equation should 
not be troubled by adding in spurious factors - in fact, a recommended technique.
		  © 2018 Peter F. Zoll. All rights reserved.