USGS retracts three 'ghost' earthquakes, blames Northern California sensors - Los Angeles Times
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USGS retracts three ‘ghost’ earthquakes, blames Northern California sensors

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In the past two days, malfunctions in the network of sensors that detect earthquakes in Northern California have issued three false alarms, forcing the U.S. Geological Survey to make a series of embarrassing retractions.

Just after midnight Friday morning, a magnitude 6.7 quake struck off the coast of Alaska. When its waves reached sensors operated by the Northern California Seismic Network, they were mistakenly interpreted as a 5.1 temblor near the Oregon border in Lewiston, officials say.

“There was a ghost in the machine,” Don Drysdale, spokesman for the California Geological Survey, said Friday. “There was no earthquake.”

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The error occurred again Saturday morning after a magnitude 7.8 quake struck off the coast of Japan and the same Northern California sensors misinterpreted its wake as a 4.8 magnitude shaker near San Simeon and a 5.5 magnitude rumble near Brooktrails.

“When the waves from these big quakes hit [the Northern California] network they think it’s a local quake,” said John Bellini, a USGS geophysicist. “They have some kind of filtering system, but it’s not working properly.”

USGS officials said they are working to repair the problem and prevent future false alarms.

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All three were soon removed from the USGS’s website, but not before they triggered a series of news reports – including three by The Times -- which later had to be retracted.

Follow @palewire and @LATdatadesk for the latest data journalism at The Times

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