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‘Indian, Eurasian plates collision
triggered quake’
HONG KONG—Deep beneath the breathtaking, tall mountain ranges of the
Himalayas is a divide that has been producing violent tremors for
centuries. On Saturday, a powerful collision between these plates
unleashed the devastating earthquake in Kashmir that has killed at least
25,000 people.
Scientists say the Indian subcontinent has been moving northward by four
centimeters a year and colliding with the Eurasian continent. That
movement has over time created the tall mountain ranges of the
Himalayas, the Karakoram, the Pamir and the Hindu Kush in India,
Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nepal.
As the Indian plate moves northward, it is pushed beneath the Eurasian
plate. This movement is accommodated by a slip on a number of major
fault zones. Experts say Saturday’s earthquake, with an epicenter 10
kilometers from Muzaffarabad, Pakistan, probably occurred on one of
these faults.
Ravender Chandha is a seismologist at India’s National Geophysical
Research Institute.
“The earthquake occurred along the thrust fault,” he explained. “The
Indian plate going below the Eurasian plate — that is the boundary and
these boundaries are marked by main boundary faults. It was essentially
a thrust movement that has created this earthquake in the region”.
A 7.5 tremor in the Kangra region in 1905 killed about 20,000 people. In
1935, 30,000 people perished in Quetta, Pakistan after a big tremor.
Saturday’s quake is the second deadly tremor in Asia in less than a
year. Last December, a magnitude nine earthquake off Indonesia’s
northern Sumatra island triggered the massive tsunami that hit a dozen
countries along the Indian Ocean. Since then, Asia has been rattled by a
number of medium to large earthquakes.
Chandha says Saturday’s tremor may be linked to the Sumatra quake but
there is no conclusive evidence yet.
“There is a belief that the Sumatra earthquake, because it was a huge
event that it shook the whole planet, even the rotation of the earth was
affected, can possibly trigger these kinds of earthquakes in different
places,” he said.
Chandha says Saturday’s tremor may be linked to the Sumatra quake but
there is no conclusive evidence yet.
Chandha says it is possible that the South Asia quake would trigger
tremors. He says earthquakes would likely occur close to the vicinity of
the Saturday’s epicenter but probably would be of smaller magnitude.
However, scientists stress they are years away from accurately
predicting when or where the next big one will happen.—INP |