Idaho Geologic Survey GeoNote 05
BORAH PEAK EARTHQUAKE

The Borah Peak earthquake was the largest earthquake ever recorded in Idaho. At magnitude 7.3 it was the strongest earthquake in the lower 48 states since the 7.5 magnitude event at Hebgen Lake, Montana, in 1959. Moderate earthquakes are not unusual in Idaho. Residents of Cascade, Stanley, Pocatello, and Malad City may feel several a year, and scores of other tremors too small to be felt are recorded annually. The Borah Peak earthquake shook residents of eight western states and two Canadian provinces, and its consequences have made Idahoans dramatically aware of the seismic setting of the state,

The Borah Peak event occurred on a known fault along the eastern margin of the Lost River Range, which is southwesternmost of three major parallel "basin and range" structures north of the Snake River Plain. Although the quake was centered in a relatively unpopulated part of the state, falling masonry took the lives of two children and injured a woman in towns nearby. Mackay (population 541), the nearest town, sustained the most damage to schools, homes, and businesses. Farther away in Challis (population 758), buildings were affected to a lesser extent, but rockfalls posed a significant hazard.

The Borah Peak earthquake is the best documented and most studied of all previous quakes in the intermountain west. It is also being used as a seismic model for potential earthquakes alon the heavily populated Wasatch Front in Utah. Geologic effects such as ground rupture, ground-water discharge, liquefaction, mass movements, and ground shaking have seldom been better displayed. Studies of the seismic waves and aftershocks are revealing more about the crustal structure of this area and are leading to new tectonic interpretations of the Basin and Range region.

 

 Earthquake Statistics 

 

Geologic Effects

Faulting

Hydrology and Liquifaction


Landslides and Rockfalls

Damage Reported to Buildings and Structures


Prepared by Roy M. Breckenridge 0286

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