Congratulations!
You have just joined a team of geologists assigned to predict
or prevent earthquakes. This is a challenging job! Read through
the following two descriptions to determine which team you are
joining.
Prediction
or Prevention?
Prediction
Team:
You are
on a geologic team with the task of predicting earthquakes. Your
team has a new prediction method that has never been tested before,
but you believe it will predict some earthquakes larger than magnitude
5.0 on the Richter scale.
One day
at work, your instruments tell you that there is a 3% chance of
a 7.2-magnitude earthquake in San Francisco within the next 15
minutes. What should you do? Here are some questions to consider:
a) What
emergency preparations would you recommend to the people and businesses
of San Francisco in the next 15 minutes?
b) If you send an emergency warning, will it save lives? How many
might be saved?
c) If the mass population panics, could the panic itself cause
deaths even without a quake? Would it cause major economic problems
(e.g. loss of business, congestion of freeways, overloading of
telephone lines, etc.)?
d) Which situation would be worse: (1) You send a warning to San
Francisco but the quake does not occur; or (2) you do NOT send
a warning and the quake does occur?
Using
your answers to these questions, write a paragraph that explains
why you want to issue an earthquake prediction or why you do not
want to issue an earthquake prediction.
Prevention
Team:
Your
team has been developing a method to prevent large earthquakes
from occurring. After much research your team has made five important
conclusions:
1. An
earthquake fault in your local area has built up enough strain
to cause a major earthquake of magnitude 6.0 or larger.
2. There
is a 50% chance that this major earthquake will strike within
the next 10 years.
3 You
may be able to prevent this single large quake by causing a series
of about 25 small quakes in the same location to release the strain
in the rocks.
4. You
predict that each of these small quakes will be less than 5 on
the Richter scale.
5. There
is a 10% chance that the series of small quakes would actually
trigger the major quake instead of preventing it.
Now here
are the questions you must consider:
a) How
much damage would be caused by 25 quakes measuring 5.0? Is this
better or worse than one quake measuring 6.0? Who would benefit
more from the 25 smaller quakes? Who would be more seriously affected
by 25 small quakes?
b) Considering
the risk of setting off the major quake, should you attempt the
25 smaller quakes? Why or why not? If a major quake does occur,
can you be held responsible? If you do not attempt to prevent
the larger quake and it actually does occur, can you be held responsible,
since you had a method to prevent it?
Using
your answers to these questions, write a paragraph that explains
why want to use your method to prevent the earthquake or why you
do not want to use your method to prevent the earthquake.