Scientists map source of Northwest’s next big quake – ScienceBlog.com

A large team of scientists has nearly completed the first map of the mantle under the tectonic plate that is colliding with the Pacific Northwest and putting Seattle, Portland and Vancouver at risk of the largest earthquakes and tsunamis in the world.

A new report from five members of the mapping team describes how the movement of the ocean-bottom Juan de Fuca plate is connected to the flow of the mantle 150 kilometers (100 miles) underground, which could help seismologists understand the forces generating quakes as large as the destructive Tohoku quake that struck Japan in 2011.

“This is the first time we’ve been able to map out the flow of mantle across an entire plate, so as to understand plate tectonics on a grand scale,” said Richard Allen, a professor and chair of earth and planetary science at the University of California, Berkeley, and the senior author of a paper published online Nov. 2 in the journal Nature Geoscience. “Our goal is to understand large-scale plate tectonic processes and start to link them all the way down to the smallest scale, to specific earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest.”

The major surprise, Allen said, is that the mantle beneath a small piece of the Juan de Fuca plate is moving differently from the rest of the plate, resulting in segmentation of the subduction zone. Similar segmentation is seen in Pacific Northwest megaquakes, which don’t always break along the entire 1,000-kilometer (600-mile) length, producing magnitude 9 or greater events. Instead, it often breaks along shorter segments, generating quakes of magnitude 7 or 8.

The Juan de Fuca plate offshore of Oregon, Washington and British Columbia is small – about the size of California and 50-70 kilometers thick – but “big enough to generate magnitude 9 earthquakes” as it’s shoved under the continental North American plate, Allen said. Because of the hazard from this so-called Cascadia Subduction Zone, a recent New Yorker article portrayed the area as a disaster waiting to happen, predicting that “an earthquake will destroy a sizable portion of the coastal Northwest.”

Source: Scientists map source of Northwest’s next big quake – ScienceBlog.com

The Daily — High-income trends among Canadian taxfilers, 1982 to 2013

Canada’s top 1% of taxfilers saw their share of the country’s total income remain the same in 2013, while their average total income grew 1.2%, the same rate as all taxfilers.

The top 1% of taxfilers received 10.3% of the nation’s total income in 2013, the same as in 2012. Their average income increased $5,600 or 1.2% from 2012 to $454,800. This was still below the 2007 peak of $519,500 (all dollar figures are in 2013 constant dollars). The average income of the top 5% rose 1.8%, while that of the top 10% increased 1.9%.

The top 1% of taxfilers paid, on average, $151,900 in income taxes to the federal, provincial or territorial governments in 2013, up $3,000 or 2.0% from a year earlier. Meanwhile, the average tax paid by all taxfilers increased by 1.8%. The top 1% of taxfilers paid 20.3% of federal and provincial/territorial income taxes in 2013, unchanged from 2012.

To be in the top 1% in 2013, a taxfiler needed to have total income of at least $222,000. There were 264,030 taxfilers that had this amount or more in 2013. To be in the top 5% required $115,700, while to be in the top 10% required $89,200.

Source: The Daily — High-income trends among Canadian taxfilers, 1982 to 2013

United Nations News Centre – In Peru, UN conference addresses poverty and inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean

As policymakers start putting into practice the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by world leaders in September, United Nations officials and Government representatives are meeting to discuss how to continue reducing poverty and inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean, despite the region’s economic slowdown.

Source: United Nations News Centre – In Peru, UN conference addresses poverty and inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean