Tag Archives: Missouri state geologist
“Get Your Home Ready for Earthquakes” Webinar May 30, 2013
The Central U.S. is in Earthquake Country
There is no earthquake season. Earthquakes can cause damage at any time of the year. Earthquakes strike with little – if any warning, and can also occur in areas not considered to be in seismically active. This was seen with the widely-felt magnitude 5.6 earthquake quake near Shawnee Oklahoma November 6, 2011 and the magnitude 5.8 quake in Mineral, Virginia August 23, 2011.
May 30, 2013, at 10 a.m. (CDT), you can join experts from the Central United States Earthquake Consortium, the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to learn how to protect your family and home from the impacts of earthquakes.
During this brief 45 minute webinar, you will learn more about:
- How to stay safe during an earthquake
- How to minimize earthquake related damages in your home
- Ways to protect your business from earthquakes and other disasters
- Common earthquake insurance questions
- How to find free earthquake safety resources and more…
To participate: RSVP by May 24, 2013 by emailing cusec@cusec.org. After you RSVP, you will be sent login instructions to join the webinar on May 30. Space is limited, so RSVP today!!! 
Missouri lies in the The New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ), the most active seismic area in the United States east of the Rocky Mountains. Small earthquakes are recorded in Missouri nearly every day. These earthquakes typically are too small to be felt but are recorded on seismographs, devices that measure the earth’s movement.
We’re Talking Fossils — Friday, April 26, 2013
Lunch and Learn from 12:15 – 12:45 p.m.
The last geology presentation during our 160th Anniversary Open House will be about fossils. Visit with staff, see special exhibits, and tour our McCracken Core Library and Research Center and Edward L. Clark Museum of Missouri Geology to learn about the contributions staff members have made to both the environmental and economic vitality of Missouri.
Register during the Open House to win a stay at Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Park or four passes to tour Onondaga Cave, in Onondaga Cave State Park.
We are located at 111 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla. Admission is free of charge. Check our website for more information
Learn About Water Wells and Groundwater — Thursday, April 25, 2013
Lunch and Learn from 12:15 – 12:45 p.m.
Turnout has been great for our geology presentations, and you have two more chances to join us during our 160th Anniversary Open House. Thursday’s presentation is about water wells and groundwater. Friday’s topic is fossils!
Visit with staff, see special exhibits, and tour our McCracken Core Library and Research Center and Edward L. Clark Museum of Missouri Geology to learn about the contributions staff members have made to both the environmental and economic vitality of Missouri.
Register during the Open House to win a stay at Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Park or four passes to tour Onondaga Cave, in Onondaga Cave State Park.
We are located at 111 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla. Admission is free of charge. Check our website for more information
Learn About Geologic Mapping Today, April 23 at 12:15 p.m.
Lunch and Learn – 12:15 to 12:45 p.m.
Don’t forget, we are having daily Lunch and Learn presentations about geology during our 160th Anniversary Open House, April 22-26.
- Tuesday, April 23 – Geologic Mapping
- Wednesday, April 24 – Caves
- Thursday, April 25 – Water Wells and Groundwater
- Friday, April 26 – Fossils
Visit with staff, see special exhibits, and tour our McCracken Core Library and Research Center and Edward L. Clark Museum of Missouri Geology to learn about the contributions staff members have made to both the environmental and economic vitality of Missouri.
Register during the Open House to win a stay at Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Park or four passes to tour Onondaga Cave, in Onondaga Cave State Park.
We are located at 111 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla. Admission is free of charge. Check our website for more information.
Plan to Visit us During Our Open House April 22-26, 2013
Help us celebrate 160 years of service to Missourians
Plan to visit during our Open House and attend special Lunch and Learn presentations about geology April 22-26, 2013. We welcome everyone to visit with staff, see special exhibits, and tour our Edward L. Clark Museum of Missouri Geology to learn about the contributions staff members have made to both the environmental and economic vitality of Missouri. We also are offering tours of our McCracken Core Library and Research Center.
Lunch and Learn – 12:15 to 12:45 p.m.
- Monday, April 22 – History and Future of the Geological Survey
- Tuesday, April 23 – Geologic Mapping
- Wednesday, April 24 – Caves
- Thursday, April 25 – Water Wells and Groundwater
- Friday, April 26 – Fossils

Register during the Open House to win a stay at Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Park or four passes to tour Onondaga Cave, in Onondaga Cave State Park.
We are located at 111 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla. Admission is free of charge. Check our website for more information.
We’re Just Two Weeks Away From Our Open House
Help us celebrate 160 years of service to Missourians
Everyone is invited to attend our special Lunch and Learn presentations April 22-26, 2013, visit with staff, see special exhibits, and tour our Edward L. Clark Museum of Missouri Geology to learn about the contributions staff members have made to both the environmental and economic vitality of Missouri.

Register during the Open House to win a stay at Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Park. Johnson’s Shut-ins State Park is a geologic jewel of the Missouri State Park System, a place with something for everyone.
You may also win four passes to tour Onondaga Cave, in Onondaga Cave State Park. Onondaga Cave is one of America’s most spectacular, with 1.5 miles of passages decorated with towering stalagmites, dripping stalactites, active flowstones, grotto salamanders and more.
Our museum is located in the Buehler Building, 111 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla. Self-guided tours are available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Lunch and Learn presentations will be held from 12:15-12:45 p.m. in the adjacent Annex Building. Pack a lunch and join us! Admission to the museum and presentations is free of charge. Parking is available in front and back of both buildings. Check our website for the schedule for presentations and read more about us.
Mark Your Calendars for April 22-26, 2013
Join us as we celebrate 160 years of service to Missourians
Since 1853, staff members with the Missouri Geological Survey have provided reliable scientific information to describe and understand Missouri’s wealth of natural resources.
Please joing us to attend special Lunch and Learn presentations April 22-26, 2013, visit with staff, see special exhibits, and tour our Edward L. Clark Museum of Missouri Geology to learn about the contributions staff members have made to both the environmental and economic vitality of Missouri.
Register during the Open House to win a stay at Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Park.
Johnson’s Shut-ins State Park is a geologic jewel of the Missouri State Park System, a place with something for everyone.
You may also win four passes to tour Onondaga Cave, in Onondaga Cave State Park. Onondaga Cave is one of America’s most spectacular, with 1.5 miles of passages decorated with towering stalagmites, dripping stalactites, active flowstones, grotto salamanders and more.
Our museum is located in the Buehler Building, 111 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla. Self-guided tours are available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Lunch and Learn presentations will be held from 12:15-12:45 p.m. in the adjacent Annex Building. Pack a lunch and join us! Admission to the museum and presentations is free of charge. Parking is available in front and back of both buildings. Check our website for the schedule for presentations and read more about us.
Join us April 22-26, 2013 for special presentations
Celebrating 160 years of service to Missourians
One hundred sixty years is not a very long time when speaking in geologic terms. However, the Missouri Geological Survey is observing this noteworthy milestone this year. Since 1853, staff members have provided reliable scientific information to describe and understand Missouri’s wealth of natural resources.
Everyone is invited to attend our special Lunch and Learn presentations April 22-26, 2013, visit with staff, see special exhibits, and tour our Edward L. Clark Museum of Missouri Geology to learn about the contributions staff members have made to both the environmental and economic vitality of Missouri.
Register during the Open House to win a stay at Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Park.
Johnson’s Shut-ins State Park is a geologic jewel of the Missouri State Park System, a place with something for everyone.
Our museum is located in the Buehler Building, 111 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla. Self-guided tours are available from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Lunch and Learn presentations will be held from 12:15-12:45 p.m. in the adjacent Annex Building. Pack a lunch and join us! Admission to the museum and presentations is free of charge. Parking is available in front and back of both buildings. Check our website for the schedule for presentations and read more about us.
Do You Remember the Nov. 9, 1968, M5.4 Southern Illinois Earthquake?
This is Your Chance to Help
Do you remember the November 9, 1968, Magnitude 5.4 southern Illinois earthquake? Did you experience shaking and do you remember where you were and what happened?
This earthquake was widely felt, and if you were living in the region at the time, it is scientifically important to note that you did or did not feel it. It was the strongest felt earthquake in southern Illinois since the M6.6 Halloween 1895 earthquake near Charleston, Mo.
In commemoration of the upcoming 45th anniversary of this important earthquake, the U.S. Geological Survey established a “Did You Feel It” site for people to record their shaking experience during this quake which was felt from Cleveland to Kansas City and Minneapolis to Atlanta.

This Isoseismal map shows lines of equal felt seismic intensity, measured on the Modified Mercalli scale. It is based on intensity estimates from data. Abridged from Seismicity of the United States, 1568-1989 (Revised), by Carl W. Stover and Jerry L. Coffman, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1527, United States Government Printing Office, Washington: 1993.
The quake occurred at about 11 a.m. local time and geologists can learn from hearing from you. Your shaking experience will be converted to an Intensity map and scientists will use this information to strengthen a study of damage and intensity that was completed soon after the earthquake by the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey and St. Louis University.
This USGS website will ask for your zip code — where you were that day and the address — on that day (not now). This is needed only to help identify the differences in earthquake shaking from location to location. As you work your way through the website’s queries, it will ‘automatically’ measure scientific information about what you experienced. This information is very important to today’s earthquake scientists.

