An earthquake much more powerful and damaging than last year's 7.8
magnitude quake could rock Katmandu and the Himalayan Frontal Fault, an
international team of seismic experts has concluded. The unsettling news comes
after field research and analysis in the year following the 2015 Gorkha
earthquake, which killed 9,000 people and destroyed 600,000 structures
throughout the region.
Geophysics professor and director of the Center for Neotectonic Studies,
Steve Wesnousky of the University of Nevada, Reno, has been studying the
Himalayan Frontal Fault for 20 years. He was one of the first scientists into
the region to assess the geophysical impacts following last year's quake. His
latest research was published in the Elsevier science journal Earth and
Planetary Science Letters.
"We conducted a number of paleoearthquake studies in the vicinity of
Katmandu in the past year, digging trenches and studying soils and faultlines
looking back over the past 2,000 years," Wesnousky said. "Coupled
with the historical record, it's apparent the faults are capable of earthquakes
far greater than the Gorkha earthquake."
Last year's earthquake and aftershocks could be viewed as a warning of a
more powerful earthquake that could rock the region with even more devastating effects. The team's
observations shows the Tribeni site is probably approaching or is in the later
stages of strain accumulation before a large earthquake, which could produce
15- to 30-foot high fractures in the earth.
"The sum of our observations suggest that this section of the
Himalayan Frontal Thrust fault, extending about 200 kilometers from Tribeni to
Bagmati, may rupture simultaneously, and the next great earthquake near
Kathmandu may rupture an area significantly greater than in the Gorkha
earthquake," Wesnousky said. "It is prudent to consider that the
fault near Kathmandu is in the later stages of a strain accumulation cycle
prior to a great thrust earthquake, much greater than occurred in 2015. In
these regards, the 2015 Gorkha earthquake did not diminish the current level of
seismic hazard in Kathmandu."
Funded by the National Science Foundation, the team visited the Katmandu
region several times for hands-on study of the faultlines. They dug two deep
trenches near the mouths of major rivers at Tribeni and Bagmati. They examined
structural, stratigraphic (layers of rocks and soils) and radiocarbon
relationships in trenches across the fault where it has produced steep banks in
soil deposited by the rivers.
In these trenches is evidence that earthquake displacement along this part
of the Himalayan Frontal Thrust has produced surface ruptures resulting in a
scarp, a steep bank, of at least five meters or 15 feet vertical separation
sometime between the years 1221 and 1262 in Tribeni, located about 200
kilometers south of Kathmandu. At the Bagmati site, the vertical separation
across the scarp registers about 10 meters, or 30 feet and possibly greater,
and was formed between 1031 and 1321 AD.
"The scenario we developed hypothesizes that the next great earthquake
may begin to the west near Tribeni and propagate into the section of fault
beneath Kathmandu that did not rupture during the 2015 Gorkha earthquake,"
Wesnousky said. "The length of such a rupture would be about 200
kilometers or greater and capable of producing a magnitude 8 or greater
earthquake. This scenario is not unique."
Wesnousky's research team includes Deepak Chamlagain, a professor at
Tribhuvan University in Kathmandu, Yashurhiro Kumahara a professor at Hiroshima
University in Japan, Ian Pierce of the Center for Neotectonics Studies and the
Nevada Seismological Laboratory at the University of Nevada, Reno, Alina Karki
of Tribhuvan University and Dipendra Gautam of the Centre for Disaster and Climate
Change Studies in Kathmandu.
Wesnousky, a member of the Nevada Seismological Laboratory in the College
of Science, has six peer-reviewed scientific papers about the Himalayan fault
and more than 100 papers about earthquakes published during his career. His
work centers on the foothills south of Kathmandu, just over the border in India
and he has expanded his study area following the historic quake, the first
large quake in that area since 1930.
Following the April 2015 quake he and two of his doctoral students, Ian
Pierce and Steve Angster, spent six days in the area south of Kathmandu looking
for ground ruptures, following leads from villagers and residents as well as
visiting various other sites studied in the past.
During their studies, the graduate students sent photos and updates about
their work in the Himalayas, which are posted on the University's website at http://www.unr.edu/science/himalayan-quake-research
Their observations are working to further define the seismic hazard of the
region as well as the mechanics of fault rupture along major continental thrust
faults.
A Fulbright Scholar, Wesnousky has studied earthquakes, faultlines and
seismic activity throughout Nevada and parts of South America, California,
Pakistan, New Zealand, Mexico, Japan, the Solomon Islands, China and India.
"Steve embodies the quintessential University professor and scientist,
conducting a full body of relevant research, successful teaching and community
outreach," Jeff Thompson, dean of the College of Science, said. "He
has done a wonderful job with the neotectonics center, informing the body of
knowledge on the world's most hazardous earthquake fault zones."
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-12-seismically-katmandu-region-larger-earthquake.html#jCp
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-12-seismically-katmandu-region-larger-earthquake.html#jCp
I respect you scientific study but find your manor of spelling KATHMANDU to be very Orientalist/Colonial. Come on please spell the capital of Nepal, correctly, thanks.
ReplyDeletewhen??
ReplyDeleteKulanjaglin, it's a one off error in a whole article of correctly spelled kathmandus, get over it. If it were wrong everytime I'd be on your side... but you're just being a keyboard warrior.
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