Middle East seismic hazard to be assessed

Published: Feb. 6, 2008 at 2:23 PM

TEL AVIV, Israel, Feb. 6 (UPI) -- Palestinian, Jordanian and Israeli seismologists have formed a cross-border partnership to research earthquake activity in the Middle East.

Tel Aviv University seismologist Hillel Wust-Bloch created the earthquake mapping research partnership to explore seismic activity around the ancient city of Jericho -- one of the world's most vulnerable areas for quakes and a region important to Jordanians, Palestinians and Israelis.

The four-year project will mark the first time that Earth scientists from those three regions have worked together directly, Wust-Bloch said. In the past, partnerships have usually occurred through a third party, such as the United Nations.

The project, which includes scientists from Al-Balqa University in Jordan, and An Najah University in Nablus, will be led by Tel Aviv University and involves deploying six nano-scale "seismic microscopes" in the Jericho region, in order to map a 39-square-mile (100-square-kilometer) area.

"From a scientific point of view, this project is innovative because we are monitoring the seismic activity of a region which is well-known, but we are doing it at much lower thresholds," said Wust-Bloch.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Drug-resistant form of Salmonella reported (7 min)
Rhino poaching surges in Asia and Africa (16 min)
England given seed for 2010 World Cup (25 min)
FDIC points to those under-served (52 min)
Gold surges to record with dollar weak
Watercooler Stories
Jockstrip: The world as we know it.
fark
Girl struck by SUV while home in bed recovering from SUV crash
Jesus Christ, what some people will do to get out of jury duty
Old and busted: An eye for an eye. New hotness: A shoe for a shoe
Man files human rights lawsuit after store bars him from bringing his service animal inside. It's...
There's a 30-percent chance your Christmas lights will kill you
Cocktail waitress claims Tiger Woods scored another hole in one (w/pic)