Read A Crack in the Edge of the World Online
Authors: Simon Winchester
Sweet Nell of Old Drury
(play), 238
Système International d'Unités, 78
Taft, William Howard, 310â11
Taiping Rebellion, 219
Taiwan earthquake of 1906, 26
Tangrenbu.
See
Chinatown
technology of United States in 1906, 50â52
tectonic plates, 57â62, 416.
See also
faults; North American Plate; Pacific Plate; plate tectonics
Tecumseh, 99
Tejon Pass (California) earthquake, 191â94
Telegraph Creek, California, 169
Telegraph Hill, San Francisco, 228, 294
telegraph lines, 124, 128, 287, 315
telephone exchanges, 287, 297
tents, 210, 313
terrane (term), 155, 416â17
Tertiary Period, 415
Tethys, 74
Texas, 111, 133â34
theaters, 238
Thingvellir, Iceland, 67â68
thixotropic (term), 417
Thomas, Lewis, 3â4
Three Years in California
(book), 116
Tibet, 39
Tiffany, Charles, 141â42
time scale, geological, 401â3
timing of Great San Francisco Earthquake, 12â18, 253, 267â71
Todd, James, 142.
See also
King, Clarence
Tok, Yukon, 377
tongs, Chinese, 222.
trails to California, 124â25
transcontinental railroads, 124, 128.
See also
railroads and railroad companies
transform faults, 60â61
Transverse Ranges, 191, 194â95
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 114â15
Temblor Range, 188â89, 194
triode invention, 51
triple junctions, San Andreas Fault, 167â69
tsunamis
Alaskan, of 1964, 371
measuring, 387
riverine, 412
Sumatran, of 2004, 28, 365 (
see also
Sumatran earthquake and tsunami of 2004)
Tumaco, Colombia, 24
Turner, Thomas, 89
Twain, Mark, 34
2004 (year), seismic events of, 28.
See also
Sumatran earthquake and tsunami of 2004
Two Years Before the Mast
(book), 116, 204
Ukiah, California, 270
umbo (term), 417
Union Square, San Francisco, 216
United States
acquisition of California by, 113â15
Army Corp of Engineers and Alaska Highway, 374
Congress, President James Polk, and Great Western Surveys, 137â38 (
see also
Great Western Surveys)
Congressional response to Great San Francisco Earthquake, 310â11
Congressional response to insurance company behavior, 328â29
earthquakes in, 95, 109 (
see also
earthquakes)
Geological Survey (
see
U. S. Geological Survey)
government (
see
government, federal)
insurance companies in, 329
military response, 304â13 (
see also
military)
Mint, 207, 286â87, 311, 315, 316
Navy, 312
Post Office, 314â16
EarthScope, SAFOD project, and, 185â87
San Francisco's supremacy and President Teddy Roosevelt, 53â54
science, technology, politics, and culture of, in 1906, 49â56
Weather Bureau, 253
U. S. Geological Survey
earthquake forecasts, 362â63
Clarence King and, 140, 142
John Wesley Powell and, 148
reports on Great San Francisco Earthquake, 280â81, 284â85, 286, 291
SAFOD project and, 185â87
University of California, 14, 18, 149
uplift, San Andreas Fault, 194â95
Ur, 79, 82
urban planning efforts, 229â30, 356â59
Valle de San Andreas, 164
Vallejo, California, 128
Valparaiso earthquake of 1906, 27â28
Vancouver, George, 116
Van Dyke, W. S., 292
velocity, earthquake wave, 398
Vesuvius eruption of 1906, 26â27, 229â30, 234
vibration detectors, 263.l
See also
seismographs
vigilantism, 129, 213
Vigne, Jean-Louis, 116
Vincent Fault, 196
Vincenti-Konkoly Vertical Pendulum, 263â64
volcanic earthquakes, 25
volcanic layered rock, 71â73
volcanoes.
See also
seismic events
animals and, 240
Iceland's, 66
measuring, 387â88
Mount Diablo mistaken for, 38â39
Mount Shasta, 45, 372
Pacific Plate and, 372
plate tectonics and, 59, 60â61, 85â86
predicting, 365
subduction, and, 165â66, 169
Vesuvius eruption of 1906, 26â27, 229â30, 234
Yellowstone National Park and, 380â85
Von Rebeur-Paschwitz Horizontal Pendulum, 264
vulnerability
building construction, 390, 391â96
San Francisco's, 47â48
Wadati, Kiyoo, 396
wagons
Conestoga, 118, 413
latrine-emptying, 313
Walker's Continental Divide Road-house, 375
Wallace, Robert, 189â91
Wall Street crash of 1929, 321
Wal-Mart (company), 375â76
Walsh, Harry, 248â49
Walsh, William, 323
Wapakoneta, Ohio, 1â3
Wappingers Falls Sequence of 1974, 87â88, 95
Washington Street, San Francisco, 243â45
water supply
damage to, 289â90, 361
establishment of, 210, 214
firefighting and poor condition of, 229, 239, 320
restoring, 313
Watson Lake, British Columbia, 375
waves, earthquake, 175â76, 390, 398â99
weather, pre-earthquake, 231.
See also
wind
Weather Bureau
San Francisco, 14, 16â17
United States, 253
weathercock, earthquake, 261â62
Wegener, Alfred, 69â70, 73â74
Wellington
(ship), 252
Wells Fargo Building, 286
Wells Fargo routes, 124
Wesley, John, 337, 342
West, American.
See
Great Western Surveys
What Cheer House, 216â17
Wheeler, George, 143
Wheeler Survey, 143
Whitehorse, Yukon, 375â76
whorehouses, 209, 224
Wilde, Oscar, 351
Willows Garden, 216
Wilson, C. E., 314
Wilson, J. Tuzo, 8â11, 416
wind
fires and, 239â40, 293, 299â300
measuring, 387
Windward Islands, 25
Winnemucca, Nevada, 258
Winslow, Arizona, meteor crater, 134â36
Wood, H. O., 400
wooden buildings, 257, 282
Woodward, Robert, 216â17
Woodward's Gardens, 216â17
Woolworth building, 51â52
Works Progress Administration, 355
World Pentecostal Movement, 335â42
World Trade Center attacks, 325â26
Wright, Orville and Wilbur, 51
writers, 225, 351â56
xenolalia (term), 337â38
Xujiahui, China, 264â65
Yellowstone National Park, 139, 380â85
Yerba Buena Island, 215, 254
Yerba Buena name for San Francisco, 46, 201â6
Yosemite National Park, 129
Young, King, 233
Yucatán Chicxulub meteor crater, 415
Yukon
Alaska Highway in, 375â76
diamond deposits in, 85
Zikawei, China, 264â65
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for the use of the illustrations and data that appear in this book: Page 100: State Historical Society of Missouri. Page 107: Cynthia Yow. Pages 168, 183: Fault lines from California Geologic Survey,
Digital Database of Faults from the Fault Activity Map of California and Adjacent Areas
. Page 173: Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. Page 262: illustrations by Laura Hartman Maestro.
Insights, Interviews & More â¦
A Conversation with Simon Winchester
Have You Read? More by Simon Winchester
“During the Falklands War, Winchester was arrested and spent three months in prison in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, on spying charges.”
A
UTHOR, JOURNALIST, AND BROADCASTER
Simon Winchester has worked as a foreign correspondent for most of his career. Before joining his first newspaper in 1967, however, he graduated from Oxford with a degree in geology and spent a year working as a geologist in the Ruwenzori Mountains in western Uganda and on oil rigs in the North Sea.
His journalistic work, mainly for the
Guardian
and the
Sunday Times
, has seen him based in Belfast; Washington,
D.C.
; New Delhi; New York; London; and Hong Kong, where he covered such stories as the Ulster crisis, the creation of Bangladesh, the fall of President Marcos, the Watergate affair, the Jonestown Massacre, the assassination of Egypt's President Sadat, the death and cremation of Pol Pot, and the 1982 Falklands War. During the Falklands conflict he was arrested and spent three months in prison in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, on spying charges. Winchester has been a freelance writer since 1987.
He now works principally as an author, although he contributes to a number of
American and British magazines and journals, including
Harper's, Smithsonian, National Geographic
, the
Spectator, Granta
, the
New York Times
, and the
Atlantic Monthly
. He was appointed Asia-Pacific editor of
Condé Nast Traveler
at its inception in 1987, and later became editor-at-large. His writing has won him several awards, including British Journalist of the Year.
He writes and presents television films on a variety of historical topicsâincluding a series on the final years of colonial Hong Kongâand is a frequent contributor to the BBC radio program
From Our Own Correspondent
. Winchester also lectures widelyâmost recently before London's Royal Geographical Society (of which he is a Fellow) and to audiences aboard the cruise liners
QE2
and
Seabourn Pride
.
His books cover a wide range of subjects: the remnants of the British Empire; the colonial architecture of India; aristocracy; the American Midwest; his months in an Argentine prison on spying charges; his description of a six-month walk through the Korean Peninsula; and the Pacific Ocean and the future of China. More recently he has written
The River at the Center of the World
, about China's Yangtze River; the best-selling
The Professor and the Madman
, which is to be made into a major motion picture by distinguished French director Luc Besson;
The Fracture Zone: My Return to the Balkans
, which recounts his journey from Austria to Turkey during the 1999 Kosovo crisis; and the bestselling
The Map That Changed the World
, about the nineteenth-century geologist William Smith. His latest books,
Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883
(April 2003) and
A Crack in the Edge of the World: America and the Great California Earthquake of 1906
(October 2005), have both been
New York Times
bestsellers and appeared on numerous best of and notable lists.
Simon Winchester lives in New York City and has a small farm in the Berkshires in Massachusetts. Mr. Winchester was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Her Majesty The Queen in 2006. He received the honor in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace.
“Mr. Winchester was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Her Majesty The Queen in 2006.”
Visit
www.AuthorTracker.com
for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.
The following interview was conducted in July 2005
.
Your last book was about the explosion of the Krakatoa volcano in the late nineteenth century. Before that you wrote about William Smith and the geological “map that changed the world.” Should we see a connection between these books and your new one?