MARION CO. EMA // EARTHQUAKE HAZARD · NMSZ + WVSZ · COAL MINE SUBSIDENCE
DOCUMENT · EARTHQUAKE HAZARD & MITIGATION

Earthquake Hazard & Mitigation

Marion County sits at the intersection of two of the most active intraplate seismic zones in North America: the New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ) ~135–200 miles south, and the Wabash Valley Seismic Zone (WVSZ) ~50–100 miles east. Add a layered exposure to abandoned coal mine subsidence across the Centralia / Wamac / Sandoval corridor, and the County's seismic risk profile is real but manageable. This page covers what the hazard looks like, how it's monitored, and what residents, businesses, and public-safety partners can do to reduce loss before, during, and after a damaging earthquake.

Primary hazard: Wabash Valley Seismic Zone
Maximum credible: NMSZ M7.5+
USGS PGA: 0.15–0.20g · 2% in 50 yr
Last reviewed: May 2026

1. Hazard overview

Marion County's seismic hazard is dominated by two distinct sources, plus the legacy of underground coal mining. Probabilistic seismic-hazard mapping by the USGS places Marion Co fully inside the 0.15–0.20g peak-ground-acceleration band at the 2% / 50-year exceedance level (~2,475-year return period). That is meaningful intraplate hazard — comparable to the seismic loading that drives mid-grade Seismic Design Categories in California — though spread over a much longer return period.

~50
Closest WVSZ edge to Marion Co (mi)
~135
Closest NMSZ fault to Marion Co (mi)
M5.4
1968 Dale, IL — last major event near county
0.18g
Median PGA hazard (USGS NSHM 2023)
VI–VII
Modeled MMI from M7.5 NMSZ scenario
~6
Historical underground coal mines in county
Bottom line A repeat of the 1811-12 New Madrid sequence would produce strong shaking (MMI VI-VII) in Marion Co — sufficient to crack masonry, drop chimneys, displace water heaters, and damage unreinforced structures. A moderate (M5-6) Wabash Valley event is more likely in any given decade and would cause similar localized damage, especially to older brick buildings in Salem and Centralia.

2. Primary seismic sources

Wabash Valley Seismic Zone (WVSZ)

Closer of the two zones — east edge sits ~50 mi from the county. Centered on the Wabash River near Mt. Carmel, IL / Vincennes, IN. Active modern microseismicity. Historic events: 1968 Dale, IL M5.4 (~50 mi east of Salem), 1987 Lawrenceville M5.0, 2008 Mt. Carmel M5.2, 2002 Caborn IN M4.6.

Paleoseismic evidence from sand-blow trenching supports M7-7.5 events at ~5,000-15,000 year recurrence. The zone is the most likely source of a moderate (M5-6) event affecting Marion Co in the next decade.

Distance: ~50–100 mi · Layer: WVSZ Outline on Operations Map
New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ)

The 1811-1812 NMSZ sequence produced three M7+ events in three months — felt as far as Boston. Three principal fault segments are mapped:

  • Cottonwood Grove (Southern): M~7.5 — 1811-12-16 mainshock. ~180 mi from Marion Co.
  • Reelfoot (Central): M~7.5 — 1812-02-07. Created Reelfoot Lake. ~155 mi.
  • New Madrid North (Northern): M~7.3 — 1812-01-23. ~135 mi.

USGS estimates a ~7-10% probability of an M7+ NMSZ event in the next 50 years, and a ~25-40% probability of an M6+ in the same window.

Distance: ~135–200 mi · Layer: NMSZ Fault Traces on Operations Map
Background seismicity

Smaller (M2.5-4) events occur regularly within both zones and across southern IL. The Operations Map's USGS Earthquakes live layer shows all events of M2.5+ within 500 km in the last 7 days, fed directly from the USGS feed and refreshed every 5 minutes.

Layer: USGS Earthquakes (M2.5+, 500km)

3. Scenario damage estimates (M7.5 NMSZ)

The IEMA / FEMA Hazus-MH catastrophic NMSZ scenario models statewide consequences for a repeat 1811-12 sequence. Consequences for the Marion Co region are summarized below — these are statewide-southern-IL averages, not site-specific predictions. Local outcomes will vary with construction quality, soil conditions, and proximity to the activated segment.

Impact area Marion Co region — modeled outcome
Modified Mercalli Intensity VI–VII — Strong to Very Strong shaking. Frightening; cracked plaster, fallen masonry chimneys, displaced furniture, broken windows. Most modern wood-frame homes survive structurally.
Building damage (residential) ~5-15% of unreinforced masonry (URM) buildings sustain Moderate or worse damage. Wood-frame ~1-3%. Highest losses on alluvial soils and over coal mine workings.
Critical facilities at risk Pre-1990 fire stations, schools, and the county courthouse — any URM structure without modern seismic detailing. Salem Township Hospital + SSM Health St. Mary's Centralia: assess seismic readiness of ICU + pharmacy.
Bridges ~3-8% of older steel/concrete bridges sustain damage requiring inspection before reopening. Bridges over Crooked Creek, Skillet Fork, and Salem Creek alluvium most exposed.
Pipelines (Patoka cluster) 4-operator hub at parcel 0115100002 (Phillips 66 / Energy Transfer / Marathon / Enterprise) — pipelines are typically resilient to M7-class shaking but valves, pumps, and tanks are not. A release here is a credible secondary hazard.
Lifelines — power Rolling outages 4-72 hours likely. Ameren regional substations need walk-down inspection. Plan for self-supplied generation at the EOC, hospitals, and PSAPs.
Lifelines — water / wastewater Cast-iron mains in older Salem and Centralia neighborhoods are vulnerable. Assume boil-water orders 24-72 hours.
Telecom / 911 Cell tower antennas and microwave dishes sometimes shift. STARCOM21 + amateur radio (ARES/RACES) are the planned degraded-comms backbone. See EOP § Communications.
Mass care / shelters Ten-shelter network on the map activated by Red Cross + MCEMA. Surge capacity ~1,200 cots short-term; sheltering longer than 72 hr requires Region 9 / IEMA support.
Mutual aid posture MABAS Region 9 (fire) + ILEAS (LE) + IPWMAN (public works) + ESF-8 coalition (medical surge). USAR via IL Task Force 1. Federal escalation through IEMA → FEMA Region V.

4. Coal mine subsidence

Marion County is in the Illinois Coal Basin. From the late 1800s through the mid-1900s, multiple underground mines worked the Herrin No. 6 and Springfield No. 5 seams, primarily in and around Centralia, Wamac, and Sandoval. The most famous is Centralia Coal Co. Mine No. 5, where on March 25, 1947 a coal-dust explosion killed 111 miners — one of the deadliest U.S. mine disasters and the catalyst for the federal Coal Mine Safety Act and Illinois surface-protection statutes.

All of Marion County's underground mines are now closed, but their workings remain. Surface-level effects can include slow trough subsidence (gradual settling that cracks foundations and walls), sudden sinkhole formation (rarer but possible over shaft collars and shallow workings), well/septic damage, and accelerated damage during earthquake shaking. The Centralia / Wamac corridor carries the highest exposure; smaller residential exposure exists at Sandoval and Odin.

Centralia / Wamac mine subsidence zone

Risk: Moderate–High. Densely worked room-and-pillar mines under residential, commercial, schools, hospitals, and infrastructure. Active claims area for the Illinois Mine Subsidence Insurance (MSI) Fund — multiple structural settlement claims annually.

Layer: Mine Subsidence Zones
Sandoval mine subsidence zone

Risk: Low–Moderate. Surface zone over abandoned shaft mine workings, primarily under the village of Sandoval and the IL-161 corridor.

Layer: Mine Subsidence Zones
Odin mine subsidence zone

Risk: Low. Small abandoned drift mine workings, mostly under cropland with limited residential exposure on the village edge.

Layer: Mine Subsidence Zones
Authoritative subsidence maps The layers shown here are generalized for situational awareness. For property-specific risk (real estate disclosure, lender, or insurance purposes), use the authoritative ISGS resources at isgs.illinois.edu/coal-maps — by-county PDF mine maps and the ISGS GIS Coal Mine Areas dataset.

5. Liquefaction susceptibility

Liquefaction occurs when saturated, loose, fine-grained soils temporarily lose their shear strength under earthquake shaking and behave like a fluid. The hallmark is sand-blow ejecta at the surface. The 1811-12 NMSZ events produced sand blows across hundreds of square miles of southern Illinois — including documented occurrences in the Wabash Valley and Skillet Fork drainages.

Marion County's liquefaction exposure follows its major drainage corridors. The map layer shows three identified zones:

Properties on these corridors should consider site-specific geotechnical assessment for new construction or major renovation. Existing critical facilities (PSAPs, hospitals, fire/EMS stations) on alluvium should request a structural seismic walk-down by a qualified engineer.

6. Monitoring & alerts

USGS Earthquake Notification Service (ENS)

Free email/SMS alerts customizable by location and minimum magnitude. EMA staff and partner agencies should subscribe with a 500 km radius around Marion Co (38.627°N, 88.946°W) and a M3.5 minimum.

USGS "Did You Feel It?" (DYFI)

Crowdsourced shaking-intensity reports. After any felt event in the area, EMA encourages residents to file a DYFI report. Aggregated reports help generate ShakeMaps for response planning.

MyShake App (UC Berkeley / USGS)

Phone-sensor early-warning network. Coverage is strongest on the West Coast but the app provides global event notifications and educational content useful for staff and residents.

CUSEC — Central US Earthquake Consortium

Multi-state EMA coordination body for NMSZ + WVSZ states. Hosts the annual Great Central US ShakeOut (3rd Thursday in October). Marion Co participates as a registered jurisdiction.

IEMA Earthquake Preparedness Program

State-level coordination and training. IEMA Region 9 includes Marion Co and conducts NMSZ tabletop exercises on a multi-year cycle.

USGS ShakeMap (post-event)

Within minutes of any felt event, USGS publishes a ShakeMap showing modeled shaking intensity by location. Use during response to prioritize damage-assessment patrols.

IRIS / EarthScope seismic network

Research-grade broadband seismometer network covering the central US — including stations in IL, IN, MO. Useful for after-action analysis.

7. During the shaking — Drop, Cover, Hold On

Drop · Cover · Hold On

The single most important action during earthquake shaking, everywhere in the world, at every age:

  1. DROP to your hands and knees before the shaking knocks you down.
  2. COVER your head and neck with one arm. If a sturdy desk or table is nearby, get under it. If not, crawl next to an interior wall away from windows.
  3. HOLD ON to your shelter (or your head and neck) until the shaking stops.

Do NOT run outside during shaking — most injuries happen from falling debris while people try to flee. Do NOT stand in a doorway — modern doorways are not stronger than the rest of the house. Do NOT use the "triangle of life" — that is contradicted by every major earthquake-safety body (USGS, FEMA, ARC).

If you are…

8. Structural mitigation (homes & buildings)

The five most cost-effective structural retrofits for residential buildings in Marion County, in priority order:

  1. Anchor the sill plate to the foundation. Pre-1980 wood-frame homes often were not bolted — the house can slide off the foundation during shaking. A licensed contractor can install foundation bolts at ~$3,000–$8,000 for a typical home. This is the highest-impact retrofit.
  2. Brace cripple walls (short walls between foundation and first floor). Plywood sheathing on the inside of cripple walls prevents collapse. Often combined with sill bolting.
  3. Strap or replace the chimney. Unreinforced masonry chimneys are the leading source of structural earthquake damage in single-family homes in this hazard band. Bracing or replacement with a metal flue is inexpensive.
  4. Brace the water heater. Two heavy-gauge straps (one upper third, one lower third) anchored to wall studs. Prevents the heater from toppling, which is the leading source of post-earthquake fires and water damage. ~$50 in materials.
  5. Identify and reinforce soft-story conditions. Older homes with garages or carports under living space ("soft story") collapse disproportionately. A structural engineer can specify shear-wall additions.

For commercial / public buildings

9. Non-structural mitigation (interior)

Non-structural items — furniture, appliances, contents — cause the majority of earthquake injuries in modern buildings. Most fixes are inexpensive and can be done in a weekend.

Weekend checklist — interior of your home or office:

Cost benchmark: A typical Marion County home can complete the entire non-structural checklist for under $200 in materials. The highest-leverage items are the water heater straps, TV anchors, and tall-furniture brackets.

10. Family preparedness

72-hour kit

The standard FEMA / ARC recommendation is at least 3 days of supplies for each person — water (1 gal/person/day), shelf-stable food, first aid, medications, flashlight, hand-crank radio, batteries, cash, copies of ID/insurance/medical info, sturdy shoes near the bed, and a whistle.

Marion Co adds: a basic respirator (N95 or KN95) for post-event dust, leather gloves for debris, and a Mylar emergency blanket per person (winter outages).

Family communication plan

Local phone networks may be saturated for hours. Designate an out-of-state contact as the family check-in point — long-distance calls often complete when local ones do not. Texts succeed when calls fail. Every family member should memorize the out-of-state number.

Establish a meeting place outside the home (mailbox / driveway) and a secondary location away from the neighborhood (church, library, park) in case the area is evacuated.

Drill: ShakeOut

Marion Co participates in the annual Great Central US ShakeOut (3rd Thursday of October). Schools, businesses, and households simultaneously practice Drop / Cover / Hold On. Free to register; the practice itself takes one minute.

Special needs

Households with elderly residents, mobility-impaired members, oxygen-dependent members, or service animals: register with MCEMA's Functional Needs Registry so responders can prioritize wellness checks. Contact crose@marionco.illinois.gov.

Pets & livestock

Plan for at least 5 days of pet food + water and a kennel/leash kit. Livestock owners: pre-stage gates and identify alternate watering sources. Most public shelters do not accept pets — pre-arrange with a friend, kennel, or designated pet shelter.

After the shaking

Expect aftershocks — often felt within minutes and continuing for days/weeks. After major shaking: check yourself, then others; check for fire and gas; then exit if the structure shows damage. Use texts, not calls. Listen to NWS Weather Radio / local AM/FM for official updates.

11. Earthquake & mine subsidence insurance

Key fact for Marion County residents

Standard homeowners insurance in Illinois does NOT cover earthquake damage. It must be purchased as a separate policy or endorsement. Mine subsidence damage is auto-included for residential properties in Marion County via the Illinois Mine Subsidence Insurance (MSI) Fund, unless explicitly declined in writing.

Earthquake insurance — Illinois

Available as a rider on most homeowners policies. Typical deductibles are 5–15% of dwelling coverage (much higher than standard policies). Premiums in Marion Co's hazard band are moderate compared to West Coast rates. Worth pricing if you carry a mortgage on a brick home or live over a mine subsidence zone.

Real estate disclosure

Illinois requires sellers to disclose known mine subsidence damage. Buyers in Marion Co — especially Centralia, Wamac, Sandoval — should request the seller's MSI claim history and pull the ISGS county mine map for the property.

12. Resources & further reading

USGS Earthquake Hazards Program

Real-time feeds, hazard maps, ShakeMap, DYFI, ENS, scenario modeling.

USGS National Seismic Hazard Map

The basis for IBC seismic-design loading nationwide. 2023 update.

CUSEC — Central US Earthquake Consortium

Multi-state coordination, ShakeOut, scenario products.

ISGS — Illinois State Geological Survey

Authoritative IL geology + coal mine maps + by-county PDFs.

FEMA P-528 — Earthquake Safety at Home

Practical homeowner mitigation guide with photos and product references.

FEMA E-74 — Reducing Risks of Nonstructural Damage

Engineering-grade nonstructural mitigation reference for hospitals, schools, EOCs.

FEMA P-774 — URM Retrofit Guide

Engineering basis for retrofit of unreinforced masonry buildings.

Great Central US ShakeOut

Annual drill — 3rd Thursday of October. Free to register.

Illinois Mine Subsidence Insurance Fund

Auto-included coverage for Marion Co residential policies.

Frequently asked questions

How likely is "the big one" in my lifetime?

USGS estimates a 7–10% probability of an M7+ NMSZ event in the next 50 years and a 25–40% probability of an M6+. Smaller (M5–6) events in the closer Wabash Valley Zone are individually less catastrophic but more likely — one or two per decade is realistic.

I rent. What can I do?

Plenty. Most non-structural mitigation does not require landlord approval — strap your water heater (with permission), anchor tall furniture, secure your TV, latch cabinets. Get renters insurance with an earthquake endorsement. Build a 72-hour kit. Identify shelters and exit routes in your building. Practice ShakeOut.

Should I buy earthquake insurance?

Worth pricing. The decision turns on dwelling type (URM is highest exposure, modern wood-frame is lowest), proximity to a mine subsidence zone, and household financial reserves. A licensed Illinois agent can quote both an earthquake rider and the (typically already-included) MSI coverage in one conversation.

My house is over an old coal mine. What now?

First — you almost certainly already have MSI coverage. Confirm with your insurance declarations page. Second, watch for the warning signs: doors/windows that suddenly stick, new diagonal cracks in masonry or drywall, separating joints, cracked foundation slabs, well-yield changes. If you see any, document with photos and contact your insurer to open an MSI claim. Third, pull the ISGS county mine map for your address to know exactly what is under you.

Where do I report a felt earthquake?

USGS "Did You Feel It?" — file a report at earthquake.usgs.gov/data/dyfi. Aggregated reports help generate ShakeMaps that EMA, MABAS, and ILEAS use to prioritize damage assessment.

Is there an earthquake "annex" in the Marion Co EOP?

Earthquake response is folded into the all-hazards EOP rather than treated as a standalone annex. ESF-9 (Search & Rescue) and ESF-3 (Public Works) are the most directly activated ESFs after a damaging event. See the EOP page for the full task organization.