Scientist Claims He Predicted Italy Quake
Seismologist Demands Apology From Authorities He Says Ignored Warnings
-
Firefighters remove debris in the city of L'Aquila, after a strong earthquake rocked central Italy, early on April 6, 2009. (AP Photo/Pier Paolo Cito)
-
Play CBS Video Video Earthquake Shakes Italy An earthquake hit L'Aquila, Italy and reduced nearby towns to rubble. Police are using search dogs to locate survivors. Allen Pizzey reports.
-
Video Deadly Quake Rocks Italy A powerful earthquake rocked central Italy overnight and, as Allen Pizzey reports, at least 100 are dead, 1,500 are injured and tens of thousands are homeless.
-
Video Quake Swarms Hit Calif. Seismologists are closely monitoring a cluster of earthquakes near Calif.'s Salton Sea. As Ben Tracy reports, 450 smaller quakes have hit the area since March 21.
-
Photo Essay Deadly Earthquake In Italy Powerful quake struck central Italy, causing entire blocks of buildings to collapse.
-
Interactive Ground Shakers Learn about what triggers an earthquake and get details on some of the world's worst.
A massive earthquake struck L'Aquila early Monday, killing at least 91, injuring 1,500 and leaving thousands homeless.
Weeks before, Goiacchino Giuliani, from the National Institute of Astrophysics, drove around in a van outfitted with a loudspeaker, warning residents to evacuate. His prediction was based on the large amount of radon gas in the area, but he was reported to authorities for "spreading alarm" and was forced to remove his evidence from the Internet, Reuters reports.
In the aftermath of the deadly quake, Giuliani has demanded an apology from officials who dismissed his warnings as scientifically unsound.
"Now there are people who have to apologize to me and who will have what has happened on their conscience," Giuliani told the website of La Repubblica.
But, as the New York Times points out, some scientists still question Giuliani's correlation between radon gas and impending earthquakes, saying that it is impossible to make accurate predictions.
"There have been earthquakes without the emission of radon gas just as there have been emissions of radon gas without earthquakes. Thus this method is far from perfect," Ignazio Guerra told Italian News agency ANSA.
Guerra said incorrect predictions "can be even more damaging than a real earthquake" because of the panic they can cause.
"To say that there will be an earthquake somewhere means nothing," Guerra said. "Predicting means indicating time, place and magnitude. At present it is impossible to do this."
On March 31, Italy's Civil Protection agency gathered scientists charged with assessing earthquake risks in an effort to reassure L'Aquila residents, Reuters reports
"The tremors being felt by the population are part of a typical sequence ... (which is) absolutely normal in a seismic area like the one around L'Aquila," the agency said in a statement before the meeting.
Surrounded now with questions of the government's dismissals of the warnings, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi seemed defensive, Reuters reports. Berlusconi said officials should concentrate on relief efforts at present and "we can discuss afterwards about the predictability of earthquakes."
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- If you make enough predictions, you're bound to get at least one right. Maybe this works for some quakes, but there still seems a lot of unanswered questions. In any case, he should not have been forced to remove the evidence from the web. Driving about with a loudspeaker may have been a bit much. All and all, this whole mess seems to have been handled very poorly. One would almost thing the US FEMA was running the show.
- Reply to this comment
- Government should not have force Giuliani to remove his evidence from the internet. Instead government's scientists should provide evidence to counter Guiliani's and let people judge for themselves. I agree there is yet no 100% certainty in earth quake prediction.
- Reply to this comment
- I wonder if he predicted the future ? [Unlike the bible nuts who predict the past...]
- Reply to this comment
- The poor fool that is dead and buried from the event would likely have wanted to know beforehand so they could make their own decision.
- Reply to this comment
- Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi seemed defensive, Reuters reports. Berlusconi said officials should concentrate on relief efforts at present and "we can discuss afterwards about the predictability of earthquakes."
======
It's called "CYA". Italian government is an oxymoron. - Reply to this comment
- Thank you Mr. Ignazio Guerra for going it alone and trying to educate folks about earthquake precursors such as radon release. Until scientists understood how a tsunami wave was formed, the need for earthquake monitoring throughout the oceans was not important. For other kinds of precursors visit the International Society of Earthquake Precursors.
- Reply to this comment




