SEATTLE — The jumps, stomps and roars of fans cheering on the Seattle Seahawks have been known to shake the ground around CenturyLink Field. Now scientists will use expected fan quakes during Saturday's playoff game against the Carolina Panthers to experiment with an earthquake early warning system.
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"BEAST QUAKE" INSPIRATION
Scientists first noticed the earth shaking around the Seahawks' stadium during a 2011 playoff game when running back Marshawn Lynch broke eight tackles and ran 67 yards during a 13-second play against the New Orleans Saints. That run, considered one of the most impressive in NFL history, sparked a fan reaction big enough that it created a seismic tremor recorded by a monitoring station near the stadium. Fans jumped and stomped their way to a magnitude-1 or -2 earthquake.
It became known as the "Beast Quake" because of Lynch's nickname.
"We became interested of what we could see if we put the instruments closer, right in the stadium with people in the stands," said John Vidale of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network.
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PLAYOFF EXPERIMENT