New Zealand was planning to send in military helicopters and a navy ship to rescue about 1,000 tourists and hundreds of residents who remain stranded in the coastal town of Kaikoura after a powerful earthquake on Monday cut off train and vehicle access.
The earthquake was unusual in that a big event on one fault may have immediately triggered a big event on a second fault, experts said on Monday.
The earthquake of magnitude 7.8 pummelled the central parts of the country at 12.02 a.m., killing at least two people, damaging roads and buildings and setting off hundreds of strong aftershocks.
“When an earthquake occurs you are changing the stress field immediately, and if there was one fault that was pretty close to breaking, the energy from an earthquake can just tip it over the edge so that may have been what happened today,” Adam Pascale, head of Australia’s Seismology Research Center, told Reuters.
New Zealand’s GNS Science agency principal scientist Kelvin Barrowman told Radio New Zealand: “It seems like the earthquake was more like two earthquakes, but very closely spaced in time.”
What remains unknown, and disconcerting, is whether the high number of aftershocks were just that, or “foreshocks” preceding another large quake.
“Let’s hope this is not a foreshock of something bigger to come, which is certainly a possibility,” said Dan Jaksa, senior seismologist for GeoScience in Australia.
There is recent precedent.
A 9.0 magnitude earthquake in Japan in 2011 that also triggered a tsunami and killed thousands of people was preceded by a quake of magnitude 7.3 and three magnitude-6.0 quakes.
The effects were felt around the world, from Norway’s fjords to Antarctica’s ice sheet. More than 5,000 aftershocks hit Japan in the following year, the largest one of magnitude 7.9.
Most powerful earthquakes occur along what are known as tectonic boundaries and Monday’s quake was no exception, said Jaksa.
“It was a tectonic earthquake that was occurring on a plate boundary, which is pretty normal,” he said. “This could not be predicted, but it wasn’t unexpected.”
One earthquake triggering another in a short period of time happens frequently on all the major tectonic plate boundaries, said Pascale, but not usually two really big ones.
As a result, New Zealand’s earthquake appeared to be causing aftershocks on two separate fault lines, he said.
“What they are seeing is aftershocks in two very distinct locations and that is what is indicating, OK, we’ve had two earthquakes here,” Pascale said.
Source: Arab News
GMT 13:29 2018 Monday ,01 January
Serbia launches probe after toxic waste dumped near BelgradeGMT 19:03 2017 Thursday ,28 December
Pregnant elephant 'poisoned' in Indonesian palm plantationGMT 16:26 2017 Sunday ,24 December
Nepal's two last known dancing bears rescued: officialsGMT 10:51 2017 Sunday ,24 December
Florida orange industry hit by hurricane, diseaseGMT 09:09 2017 Sunday ,24 December
Modern-day amber 'Klondikes' thrive in troubled UkraineGMT 19:23 2017 Saturday ,23 December
Indonesian pangolin faces extinction due to traffickingGMT 11:37 2017 Friday ,22 December
Global warming may boost asylum-seekers in Europe: studyGMT 07:32 2017 Friday ,22 December
Modern-day Mowgli: Indian toddler forges bond with monkeysMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor