Thursday, February 11, 2010

USGS: Kleen Explosion of "Moderate" Intensity, But Left No Seismic Signature


The United State Geological Survey has mapped the locations where Sunday's blast was heard and felt. Their results confirm anecdotal reports that the sound did not travel uniformly from the site of the explosion, and provide an estimate of the intensity of the blast itself.

The 259 responses given to the USGS over the internet show that to the north, in Cromwell, residents did not even feel the blast, while to other directions, residents as far as 20 miles away felt the blast. The terrain and weather conditions may have strongly attenuated the blast shock wave in some directions.

Community surveys are used by the USGS to measure the effects, or intensity, of an earthquake. Intensity is a qualitative measure distinct from the magnitude of an earthquake, which is expressed in the quantitative Richter scale. Two earthquakes of the same magnitude, but happening at different depths or in different types of soil, can have similar magnitudes (Richter scale) but very different intensities.

The Kleen explosion registered as a IV (moderate) on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale, which goes from I to XII. Surprisingly, the blast did not register at all on the earthquake monitoring seismograph at Yale, giving a 0.0 on the Richter scale, as reported in The Day, by Judy Benson. By contrast, an earthquake felt in Illinois on Wednesday, with the same Mercalli Intensity of IV, had a magnitude of 3.8.

Thus, the shock wave seems to have traveled great distances in the air, but not at all in the ground, perhaps because of the nature of the explosion, and perhaps due to the nature of the rock on which the Kleen Plant is located.

No damage to Aquifers Expected.
I asked Peter Patton, a hydrologist at Wesleyan, whether the blast might have caused any impact on either the wells in the area or the large aquifer which the city taps for much of our drinking water. He said that even if the explosion had shaken the ground enough to register on seismographs, it still would not have damaged the aquifers, which are recharged from below the Connecticut River. In fact, he said that surface explosions are sometimes used to increase the recharge rate for aquifers, by opening up cracks for water to seep through bedrock.

6 comments:

  1. i witnessed crews repairing an apparent broken water pipe on Pameacha Avenue (between High St and South Main St) on Tuesday and I was wondering if it was an after effect of the blast. thank you for this very informative piece.

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  2. Thanks... this begins to explain one lingering (if not very important) question I have. How could I be in Stop&Shop - just about 2 miles due east - and not have heard or felt a thing? Unless I was in my car... which brings up another question. Exactly what time did this go down? I've seen the Courant refer to it anywhere from 11:00am to 11:30. Anyone have an exact time?
    (My grocery receipt says 11:17am).

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  3. regarding exact time: I have also been curious as to why such a wide range of times is being reported when it seems clear from what I have heard it was right around 11:15 am. My input - I was just about a couple moments from hitting the "publish post" button on the Art-Farm auditions blurb when I felt the explosion, and that post is stamped at 11:20am.

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  4. Where were you exactly, Karen S.? And what were your impressions? Looking at that map, it appears almost like a cone shape down the river valley. A topo map overlay might reveal something.

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  5. Wikipedia, amazingly, has an entry on the explosion:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Kleen_Energy_Systems_explosion
    They say it occurred exactly at the time that Mr. Flood's receipt was being printed, 11:17.

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  6. /felt it - the clock said 11:18.

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