Andong Wang’s research while affiliated with China Earthquake Administration and other places

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Publications (1)


Table 3 Acronyms and Names of People (Family Name Is First)
Figure 9. Examples of damaged or collapsed houses in Haicheng County to show the shake-resistant nature of their wooden frames. Left: Chagou Commune. Right: Ganwang Commune. See Figure 6 for locations of the communes.  
Figure 10. Two pages of the 1975 log book of the Shipengyu Observatory that contain anomaly reports. Upper half of left page (18 January): " Cao Xiangqing of Yingkou County Earthquake Office phoned; amateur telluric current readings: . . . [list of readings from five amateur groups]. " Lower half of the same page: " Mr. Cao phoned from Yingkou County at 21:30; water suddenly began to ooze from the ground in Mou Guangjun's pigpen in Fengjiafu Brigade of Zhoujia Commune. Now (9:30 p.m.) [the pen is] full of water. His yard is on the slope of a relatively high hill. There is a ditch in front of his yard lower than the pigpen by 1.5 m. Now water is turning and bubbling. Now water is flowing to the ditch from the pigpen. [The pigpen] was dry before. It's never happened in history. " The sentences in the two pairs of parentheses are: " Whether to report this to the province needs further discussion " and " Cao called [again] at 11:45 pm " . Lower half of right page (19 January): " Zhang of Xiongyue [County] Earthquake Office (9:15): three mice were seen unafraid of people in Mr. Chi's residence in Wenquan past 6 p.m. No other changes. "  
Predicting the 1975 Haicheng Earthquake
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July 2006

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7,272 Reads

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193 Citations

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America

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Shihong Sun

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Andong Wang

The publicized four-stage (long-term, middle-term, short-term, and im-minent) prediction of the M 7.3 1975 Haicheng, China, earthquake once generated worldwide fascination. Yet the prediction process has remained mysterious because of lack of reports on real-time documentation and details of how warnings were issued. In the present work, study of declassified Chinese documents and interviews of key witnesses have allowed us to reconstruct this important history. Our findings indicate that there were two official middle-term predictions but no official short-term prediction. On the day of the earthquake, a county government issued a specific evacuation order, and actual actions taken by provincial scientists and government officials also effectively constituted an imminent prediction. These efforts saved thousands of lives, but the local construction style and time of the earthquake also contributed to minimizing fatalities. Evacuation was extremely uneven across the disaster region, and critical decisions were often made at very local levels. The most important precursor was a foreshock sequence, but other anomalies such as geodetic deformation, changes in groundwater level, color, and chemistry, and peculiar animal behavior also played a role.

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Citations (1)


... semi-quantitative analysis (Wang et al. 2006;Jena et al. 2020b). In this context, the hazard represents the probability of an earthquake occurring in a specific geographic location within a defined timeframe (Jena et al. 2020b). ...

Reference:

Seismic hazard analysis of China’s islands based on Bayesian network
Predicting the 1975 Haicheng Earthquake

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America