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tv   60 Minutes  CBS  September 11, 2016 6:00pm-6:53pm CDT

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ian: miami dolphins and rest of our c "60 minutes" will be seen after the game except on the west coast. fourth and 4. dan: don't forget about jimmy graham. he is isolated on the weak side of the formation here. ian: 2:08 to play. fourth down for seattle. miami trying to hold on. wilson. it's complete. baldwin, russell wilson comes through! dan: and baldwin got out of bounds with two seconds before the 2:00 warning. so it's all good for seattle.
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he runs through the entire zone coverage for 22 yards, stopping the clock. ian: seattle on the move. first down. seahawks. wilson running, slides, we hit the two-minute warning. 1:57 to play. seahawks trying to come from
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ian: the wait is almost over. be there when "the big bang theory" will have every talking. happens on monday, september 19. joseph and his first game as lel wilson time is all about. an opportunity with 1:57 to go to rally for the win againstcon in dolphins' territory.
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it's first catch of the day. and first down of the day and covering 11 yards. ian: shotgun for russell wilson. 1:28. d he did the playoffs against minnesota. dan: drove the team at the end of the half to get a field goal. this is definitely wilson time.
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and september 11 memorial museum and followed by "big brother" lw fo by "ain dead." miami has called a time-out. the dolphins has one remaining. 1:09 left on the clock. a second and 5 from the 12. dan: that was the first time xavien making a play. russell wilson recognizes that he is a rookie with very little preseason experience. but he made a solid tackle to keep the receiver out of the end zone. ian: wilson from the gun.
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wilson fires underneath. catch made inside the 5. doug baldwin. and seattle inching closer. under 1:00 left. first and goal. dan: two big catches on this drive by wilson's favorite receiver. russell wilson, 42 pass attempts, a career high. dan: half of them on a bad ankle. look at baldwin finding that spacial awareness there, huh snr just settling down turning to the quarterback giving wilson the target and offensive line and appears now the dolphins' defensive front four unable to get any pressure on a wounded quarterback. ian: miami has called its last
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57 seconds remaining. first and goal from the 2 for seattle. dan: if russell wilson were healthy, i would be aware of the quarterback draw, but not in this case. i still like the draw play here. michael in the backfield. seattle trying to come from behind. wilson hands it off. michael leaves his feet. and he is brought down after picking up a yard. we are down to 4 seconds left. seattle has the one time-out. second and goal for the seahawks.
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touchdown. a flag on the play. dan: offensive interference, a pick play to get baldwin open in the corner of the end zone. officials all over it. referee: no foul for defensive holding. ian: seattle takes the lead. take a look, dan. dan: kearse came down inside. and that's a good play by kearse to avoid the contact. and then baldwin running away from bobby mccain and wilson
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hauschka through the years. dan: last year, that ball was blocked or deflected. that's why it missed. that ball was tipped and made it sail to the left. ian: he missed four of them last
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he got a little piece of it. and a potential game changer here. a two-point disparity. miami has no time-outs left and we have 31 seconds remaining. dan: remember last year, the first time they moved the extra point back. he had two extra points blocked last year. it was not his fault. r's fault. the blocking up front ian: hauschka on the approach. . and nfl debut. 20-yard li pierre-louis with the catch on
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today after the ankle injury. whatiandpa. ryan tannehill and the dolphins have 26 seconds to franks has a career long of 53 and need to get around 50 yards. tannehill. dials up. tannehill had stills, but it's too far over his head. chancellor back there. second down, 20 seconds to play. dan: it was an opportunity for the ball to be dropped into stills. chancellor coming over late. ball well overthrown.
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yards right there if he makes that catch. ian: now it's miami. 20 seconds left. tannehill. in trouble. tannehill has the ball knocked away out along the sidelines. dan: another big play by marsh. tannehill. referee: out of bounds. the ball will be brought back to ian: frank clark on the veut he was along the whate on the sideline. dan: only good thing about that play, ian, stop the clock.
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ian: 12 seconds left. the 12th man having an impact. miami down by 2, but the dolphins are back at their own 9-yard line. tannehill. devoured! thrown down in the end zone. it's over! cliff avril. seattle wins it. miami was trying to pull off a
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sack. so no safety here for safety. the seahawks get the w on nfl kickoff weekend. seattle comes from behind. russell wilson to doug baldwin. the game winner. final score in the pacific northwest, the seahawks, 12. the dolphins coming up tonight -- so long from seattle. pete carroll and the seahawks get it done. you have been watching the nfl
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>> boy placing the ball beautifully placed to williams,
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>> thank you for watching this presentation of the national
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>> stahl: today marks 15 years since the horrendous events of september 11, 2001. now at ground zero in new york city, there's a memorial museum that tells the story of that day and honors its nearly 3,000 victims. but deciding how to do that wasn't easy. was absolutely every single tiny
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>> paula grant berry: there were lots of issues. >> iken: oh, boy. lots, lots. >> stahl: tonight we'll take you back to the challenges of creating our nation's 911 museum. >> mike anderson: not a day goes by where i don't think about my son. he was mike jr. he was my only son. >> pelley: he is what is known as a gold star parent, because his son, mike anderson, jr., a marine, was killed in iraq. now, the father sees it as his duty to help other gold star parents at this remarkable event. the burden that you have is unbearable. >> anderson: at times, yes, sir. >> pelley: but when you come to this event, you take on the unbearable burdens of another 100 families. >> anderson: my son went abroad to help people he never met. is human nature to want to
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surprise you to hear that oklahoma is the most earthquake- prone state in the continental u.s. >> whoa! >> whitaker: in 2009, there were, on average, two earthquakes per year of magnitude three or greater. last year, there were 907. what's more astonishing is that nearly all of oklahoma's earthquakes are manmade. >> melinda olbert: what quake app do you use? >> kathy matthews: i use the one-- >> whitaker: these oklahomans say they check their phone apps to track earthquakes arod this must be unnerving. >> matthews: it's no way to live. it's no way to live. >> i'm steve kroft. >> i'm leslie stahl. >> i'm bill whitaker. >> i'm scott pelley. those stories, tonight on "60 minutes." there are two billion people who don't have access to basic banking, but that is changing.
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many of us to believe that it's been 15 years since september 11, 2001-- that awful day on which so many innocent lives were taken, and our nation was changed forever. today at ground zero in lower manhattan, one of the largest and most ambitious memorial museums in the world tells the y locad ven ie underground, the nationalseptems been visited by more than six it'seen opngesw cony hoo years
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9/11: nothing about thes, t pne about the terrorists. all that was meant to be the job >>reenwald: just watch youector, step, lesleye. >> stahl: but at this construction site, the issues went far beyond where to put the walls. virtually every decision here>>o foundation hall.he place where so many innocent
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we're right where the buildings collapsed. we're in it. >> greenwald: most museums are buildings that house artifacts; we're a museum in an artifact. >> anthoula katsimatides: it'sw the authensiloss monica iken's husband, michael. roge?r's daughter jean was aer flight attendant on american >> has to be there.eenwd: we bee voices of people from around the 9/11, which was witnessed within hours by people all across the
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>> phone rang, woke me up. my business partner told me to turn on the television. >> stahl: greenwald says we are all survivors of 9/11, so it's fitting that visitors would descend to the main exhibits of the museum beside an enormous staircase, here encased in wood, that served as an escape route. >> greenwald: on 9/11, hundreds of people ran to safety down this stair. >> stahl: the so-called ur
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them-- like this fire engine lowered in through a hatch in the roof to honor first responders, 441 of whom lost their lives; and the famous last remnof th most powerful things on display here... okay, so that's flight 11. >> greenwald: takes off from >>ston. : played out in the air... >> greenwald: flight 11 is hijacked.
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one advisor told gre toldta sion from faly memrs, husband-- as a testament to the professionalism of the hijacked crew >> lyles: there are three guys; they've hijacked the plane. i'm trying to be calm. >> greenwald: she is so composed. >> stahl: she's in flight attendant mode. >> greenwald: she's in flight attendant mode. and at the very end of the call, she says something like, "i hope i see you again, baby." lyles: o see your face again, baby. i love you. bye. and,f course, audio was just the beginning of the sensitive questions about what should be
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let me ask you, what about some of the horrific shots, for example, of people jumping? >> greenwald: this is probably, as far as i'm concerned, the most sensitive question for this museum. >> joe daniels: we went through a lot of debate internally about, "do we show that side of the story?" >> stahl: on the morning of september 11, joe daniels came out of the subway to the gruesome sight of bodies falling from the north tower. today, he is president of the 9/11 memorial and museum. >> danlsyou never want to have to see that; someone 100 stories up, 1,000 feet in the air, having to makat kinof choice. on the same time, there's a very rong feeling that this was a part of the story; that a group of people from this group, al qaeda, put innocent people in a position to have to do that. >> stahl: when you think about what terrorism means, this really says it. >> greenwald: absolutely. it's an impossible thing for a
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human being, and yet it became possible on 9/11. so, for us not to acknowledge that would be to not be true to the story. >> stahl: but how? with video of people falling, or photographs? and what about the feelings of family members? greenwald told us that she understood that some would never want to see an exhibit on this subject, but many argued strongly that it had to be there. >> greenwald: i have to say that we were also... i... i don't want to say accosted--t' little strong-- but, you know, shaken by the lapels by family members who said, "you have to tell the story. don't whitewash the story. tell it like it was. the world needs to know." >> daniels: so, we ultimately decided that we will include an exhibit, but do it in a way, in y warned., where people will be and if they don't want to see it or have their family see it, they can easily avoid it. >> stahl: one exhibit they want everyone to see is what greenwald calls the heart of this museum, a space devoted to
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lining the walls. those giant walls out there go all the way up. every bit of space will be covered... >> greenwald: right. >> stahl: ...with faces? >> greenwald: yes. the impression will be that you are surrounded by nearly 3,000 faces. >> stahl: these are the photographs that now cover those walls. look at those faces. >> greenwald: they're ages two and a half to 85, from over 90 countries, every sector of thevc group. >> stahl: visitors can search these inive teractbles and call up profiles of each person, with photos and recorded remembrances by family members and friends, like this one by the father of paul acquaviva, who died in tower 1. >> mr. acquaviva: he never had a bad word, literally, to say about anybody. he always looked at the positive.
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me because i'm very critical at times. to me, that was one of the most important things about paul. >> greenwald: some of them are funny. some of them are sweet. and we're not telling you who they are; their loved ones are telling you who they are. >> stahl: visitors can also search by birthplace or by company. >> greenwald: if i call up cantor... >> stahl: cantor fitzgerald was the company that lost more employees than any other. >> greenwald: 658 people... >> stahl: look at that. >> greenwald: ...who died on >> stahl: from that one compan katsimitides, anthoula's >> katsimatides: so, tre's four of us growing up-orotos toe oh the pictures stop here. >> stahl: family members allther loss, buc.e >> greenwald: it's the families of nearly 3,000 people. it's, you know, probably 10,000,
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their own perspectives, their own desires, their own ideas about what kind of museum should here. >> stahl: was absolutely every single tiny little thing an argument? >> paula grant berry: there were lots of issues. >> iken: oh, boy. ( whistles ) lots, lots. >> stahl: like whether to exhibit pictures of the perpetrators. and what about osama bin l? do they belong in the 9/11 museum? well, what was the argument for not shg bin laden? >> daniels: that on this... this actual ground where the
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myoved one by showing thery of image of the person members took the opposite view, manding un >> iken: you have to tell the story. >> katsimatide you know, we had to express who did this to our loved ones. >> daniels: we don't want any ild or adult or s?udent to walk through this museum and not leave knowing who did this to spirit of unity after the attacks, so there are tributes here to recovery workersnd knowledge that when it opened, virtually no one under the age
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about the children who don'ts.:o >> berry: rig. >> katsimatides: we're not talking about a simple little happening, you know. we're talking about a brutal attack on our country, you know, where 00le we that day. >> good evening tomorrow policy makers interest rate hike. a hinge in cargo ship stranded off california finally unloaded at the south korean company avoids bankruptcy.
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>> scott pelley: in the wars since the terrorist attacks on september 11, 2001, thousands of americans have lost sons or daughters. bereaved parents often become isolated in a familiar world. friends don't know what to say about a grief no words can touch. there is no term in the dictionary for a parent who has lost a child. so, these mothers and fathers call themselves gold star parents. it's in the tradition of the military service flags that hung in homes during the world wars. each blue star on the banner stood for a loved one serving in
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gold honored those never coming home. this past april, we first told you about how some of these families are finding solace, once a year in san francisco, in the embrace of the only people who can truly understand-- other gold star parents travelling the same endless road. in downtown san francisco stands an unusual war memorial, looking as it did in the 1920s when it was a hotel and theater. after world war ii, marines transformed this into a club that, today, honors all vets. >> mary shea: i look at this building. it's like a ship that sails every february. that once we're inside here, we're safe.
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anybody. it's sort sublinal language that we all understand. >> pelley: mary shea learned the language of loss when her son was killed. it's a language that cannot be translated, and so she and her husband, bill, felt they could no longer be understood. >> bill shea: you're kind of cast adrift and you're sort of floating nowhere. and you don't know where to go or what to do. and there they were. understanding better than we understood, the support that we needed. shea's attend every year ise of the east bay area-- "blue stars," with sons and daughters who served iliry. l nation prays for your peace. >> pelley: later, gold star parents and counselors lead conversations for smaller groups, like single parents and siblings. it's all invitation only, no
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and i was in the bedroom and then i heard mary's voice. "bill, come here, right now. come here, come here. come here." and i went out there and, and soon as we saw them, we knew what was-- what we were facing. >> pelley: saw who? th the, there's a chaplainiers. others. was it two other soldiers who were there to tell us? >> pelley: tim grew up in northern california. dad a lawyer, mom a teacher. >> bill shea: well, i come most every day and just have a little chat with tim. >> pelley: eleven years ago, at tim's funeral, mary noticed women she had never seen before. >> mary shea: where did these people come from, and why are they here? why do they care? >> pelley: the strangers were blue star moms, including nancy totman. how many of these funerals have you been to? >> nancy totman: 42 funerals.
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>> deb saunders: i can think of a couple of parents right off hand... >> pelley: deb saunders understood their isolation. >> saunders: you can express your sympathy, but you cannot empathize with someone unless you're walking in their shoes. and that's what i knew we had to do, was somehow gather these folks together, that they were better equipped in their journey to help one another. >> pelley: to gather the gold stars, deb saunders reached out retired marine major general mike myatt, the president and c.e.o. of the marines' memorl association. >> mike my dnder she was a blue star mom.he said, "i'm worried about the gold star moms. we need to provide some kind of comfort for them." >> saunders: i knew general myatt had the resources to help
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yelner.?z? two options, because you fooled mommy. you have a choice. navy or air force? pick one." >> pelley: yolanda vega thought those were the safer options. >> vega: he came over and he hugged me and walked away. and as he's walking straight toward the recruiter, he just went like this. >> pelley: he never looked back. the air force gave him maturity and purpose. he served in iraq, then afghanistan. and there, safe on base, he volunteered for an army patrol. there was a bomb. he was 24. >> vega: i was told that he was killed instantly. thank you, god.
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my baby. >> pelley: yolanda barricaded herself behind close friends and family. blue star moms sought her out and she was amazed. >> vega: being a blue star mother, coming over to a gold star mother and hugging-- we're their worst nightmare. and yet, they are so willing to ensuring our well-being. i couldn't have done it without them. >> pelley: your eyes light up when you talk about them, and yi redeeming about that experience. >> vega: i knew that my son would always be remembered. and that's one of the biggest
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that our children will be forgotten. that's not going to happen. >> pelley: "the children," as parents will always call them, are celebrated at tribute tables. their child lives again in every new introduction. >> bill shea: because when tim was a senior-- >> pelley: we asked a few families to assemble, for us, their tabletop biographies. this is a pin she was little? >> clago >> pelley: meet aleciaood. daughter of claire and paul. a senior airman armed with what had to be the biggsm the air force. >> pelley: as you are with more than 100 other tables at the event, people come by. what does it do for you? >> paul good: it gives us a sense of that she didn't lose her life for nothing. >> pelley: in 2006, alecia good was on counterterrorism duty near the horn of africa when her
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another. she was 23. her daughter tabatha was two. >> claire good: tabatha just recently went through her mom's wardrobe and the first thing she did was put on her uniform and she looked just like her mom. it was cute. >> paul good: she realizes that her mom's special and that she won't be forgotten. >> mike anderson: not a day goes by that i don't think about my son. he was mike jr., he was my only son. he was my firstborn. >> pelley: mike anderson, senior, has been coming to the event all 11 years. >> pelley: when you see that new family come through the door at the next meeting, what do you tell them? >> anderson: tell them that we love them, we welcome them, again, "we're walking the same dark valley. i know how you feel. it does get a little better over time." people talk about closure. there's never real closure, at least not in my mind. but there are steps forward to
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closure. >> pelley: what are those? the steps to ease the pain? >> anderson: faith, for me.road, iraq myself to see some of the same faces, be in the region, breathe some oth that my son unselfishly fought and died for. >> pelley: you went to iraq. >> anderson: yes, sir. >> pels a vilian? >> anderson: it was a need for me, it was more than just a want. >> pelley: mike anderson, jr. joined the marines the me got out of high school. in 2004, 11 days before christmas, he was shot retaking the ty the burden that you have is unbearable. >> anderson: at times, yes sir. >> pelley: but when you come to this event, you n th o unbearable burdens of another 100 families. >> anderson: my son went abroad to help people that he'd never met, that he would probably never ever see again.
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its human nature to want to help others. >> myatt: and people asked me, "what do you say to the gold star parents?" i say, "well, you don't have to say anything to them, just ask them, 'tell me about your son or your daughter'." man, they will just talk. they will just tell you all they can about the son or daughter. and it's really something. i wished i had known this as a young officer. because i went to vietnam and i had people killed out of my family, and the ry last one was in kansas. i was visiting them and i went father said, "come on in." and the mother, she had on her apron. she said, "i just fixed dinner, would you have dinner with us?" i said, "no, i'm in a hurry, but i want to tell you about your son. and i told them how he was killed and everythin
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then, "won't you stay for dinner?" "oh, i better not." and i wasn't mature enough to know it. >> pelley: that'y wanted you to stay. >> myatt: yeah, yeah, and now i know it. >> pelley: for general myatt, there is redemption now, in making a home for the memories. >> bill sheare ti visiting my son's graveside and thinking about how every day they would face the day and realize that this is dangerous and they did it anyway. i have a duty to do and this duty is dangerous and i'm going to do it. >> pelley: tim's death transferred that duty to you. >> mary shea: right. >> pelley: the duty to live your
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you're in.thill shthat's right. i think that's right. and that's the best way to honor him. >> pelley: once a year, gold brace of their peers, truth; a lis >> cbs sports update is brought to you by the link or motor company i'm james brown with scores. bengals top jets in game that included five lead changes, eagles rookie caught two touchdowns. aaron rodgers threw two touchdown passes ran for another green bay's win. two scores to win in his texas
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>> bill whitaker: oklahomans are
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today, they're just as wary of the hazards coming from the ground beneath their feet. tornado alley is now earthquake alley. as we first reported in may, oklahoma is the most earthquake prone state in the continental u.s. what's more astonishing is that nearly all of oklahoma's earthq th average, two earthquakes a year in oklahoma that were magnitude three or greater. last year, there were 907. that's right, 907. the vast majority of earthquakes are small, causing little or no damage. but what they lack in punch,
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this tally from the u.s. geological survey shows the number of earthquakes in oklahoma has increased every 2,000 magnite e. with more than that means more of the big quake last december in edmond, oklahoma. >> melinda olbert: i woke up scared to death, praying that the house wouldn't fall down. >> whitaker: melinda olbert and kathy matthews aghboei in use? >> kathy matthews: i use the at.okker: all in one day? >> matthews: all in one 24-hour period. >> whitaker: this must be unnerving. >> matthews: it's-- it's no way to live. it's no way to live. >> whitaker: cornell university seismologist katie keranen was teaching in oklahoma when the
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she says the situation is unprecedented. what's going on here in oklahoma has never been seen before? >> katie keranen: just the number of earthquakes is astounding, but how fast it grew it is perhaps even more astounding. >> whitaker: keranen and her student catherine lambert have set up equipment to detect extremely small quakes in an area where there haven't been many, hoping the small quakes might provide warnings of larger ones. >> keranen: and so, so far we have only looked at data from four days of recording, and so we see smallth area. >> whitaker: even ovoueran: eve, we actually se earthquakes.anthat's right. >> whitaker: keranen was among the first scientists to link the earthquakes to oil and gas production. these are martnmade uakes. eahquakes is noter thas and chemicals pumped underground

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