Close X
Thursday, December 5, 2024
ADVT 
India

Warning Gets Louder Of Massive Himalayan Temblor

IANS, 30 Nov, 2018 07:53 PM
    Growing warnings by scientists of an impending high-magnitude earthquake in the Himalayas have got further credence from yet another study by Indian researchers.
     
     
    The new study, led by seismologist C.P. Rajendran of the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research in Bengaluru, says the "enormous stacking up of strain in the region portends at least one earthquake of magnitude 8.5 or more in one of the overlapping segments of the central Himalayas anytime in the future".
     
     
    According to the study, published in "Geological Journal", the researchers critically evaluated existing databases along with the data from two newly explored locales -- Mohana Khola in far western Nepal and Chorgalia, which falls within the Indian border, to determine the timing of the last faulting event on the frontal thrust of the central Himalayas.
     
     
    The researchers followed the local geology and structural map published by the Geological Survey of India, besides using Google Earth and imagery from Indian space agency ISRO's Cartosat-1 satellite.
     
     
    The analysis, the researchers say, "compels us to conclude that a great earthquake of magnitude 8.5 or more that occurred between 1315 and 1440 had unzipped a stretch of about 600 km (the length of central seismic gap from Bhatpur to beyond Mohana Khola) in the central Himalayas with an average slip (or displacement) of 15 metres".
     
     
    The present study underlines the fact after this massive earthquake, the frontal thrust in the central Himalayas (covering parts of India and eastern Nepal) has remained seismically quiet for 600 to 700 years, implying enormous build-up of strain in the region. 
     
     
    "An earthquake of magnitude 8.5 or more is overdue in this part of the Himalayas, given the long-elapsed time.
     
     
    "Considering this potentially high seismic risk, this will be particularly catastrophic for a region marked by an ever-growing population and unhindered expansion of the built-up environment, to be contrasted with poor preparedness to meet this contingency," Rajendran told this correspondent.
     
     
    Roger Bilham, a US geophysicist at the University of Colorado whose years of work laid the basis for the current knowledge about earthquakes in the Himalayan region, fully supports the Indian researchers' findings.
     
     
    "They are undeniably correct in concluding that should an earthquake occur now, its magnitude could equal 8.5," Bilham told this correspondent in an email.
     
     
    "My own evaluation of the available evidence suggests their estimate is conservative, and should the rupture zone extend from east of Almora to west of Pockara (Nepal) the earthquake will exceed 8.7," he added
     
     
    The findings by Rajendran and his team confirm two other studies by Indian geophysicists -- one led by K.M. Sreejith at the Space Applications Centre, Ahmedabad, and another led by Vineet Gahalaut, director of the National Centre for Seismology in New Delhi.
     
     
    Analysing data from a network of 36 Global positioning System (GPS) stations and using a geodetic method called InSAR (Interferometric synthetic aperture radar) Sreejit and his team reported (in the journal Scientific Reports) that an earthquake of a magnitude similar to or greater than that of 2015 Gorkha earthquake (7.8) is due in the central Himalayas.
     
     
    Gahalaut and his team, who analysed the continuous GPS measurements of crustal deformation from 28 sites reported (in Earth & Planetary Science Letters) that the next major earthquake is likely to occur in the Garhwal-Kumaun segment of the northwest Himalayas.
     
     
    Arun Bapat, a Pune-based research seismologist who correctly predicted the December 26, 2004, Indian Ocean tsunami, told this correspondent: "The predicted large magnitude earthquake in the Himalayas could occur most probably in 2018 or its proximity."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Delhi Man Suffering Heart Failure Cheats Death 13 Times. How He Survived

    Delhi Man Suffering Heart Failure Cheats Death 13 Times. How He Survived
    LVAD is a pump that is used for patients who have reached end-stage of heart failure. It is inserted inside the patient with thin wire emerging out of the body linked to a power source outside.

    Delhi Man Suffering Heart Failure Cheats Death 13 Times. How He Survived

    Punjab Victim Of ‘Narco Terrorism’, Grant It Special Status: Minister Brahm Mohindra

    Punjab Victim Of ‘Narco Terrorism’, Grant It Special Status: Minister Brahm Mohindra
    The clamour for special category status to the state was raised by Punjab Health Minister Brahm Mohindra in a letter to Union Health Minister JP Nadda.

    Punjab Victim Of ‘Narco Terrorism’, Grant It Special Status: Minister Brahm Mohindra

    18-Year-Old Woman Allegedly Commits Suicide In Delhi College

    The phone of the woman has been seized, the official said, adding that her family had been informed.

    18-Year-Old Woman Allegedly Commits Suicide In Delhi College

    Tourists Who Litter On Beaches And Do Drugs Not Welcome In Goa: Minister

    Tourists Who Litter On Beaches And Do Drugs Not Welcome In Goa: Minister
    The minister also said that existing laws were not strong enough to tackle the nuisance created by hawkers on the beaches in the state

    Tourists Who Litter On Beaches And Do Drugs Not Welcome In Goa: Minister

    Police To Ask US To Preserve Shujaat Bukhari's Social Media Data

    Police To Ask US To Preserve Shujaat Bukhari's Social Media Data
    On June 14, Shujaat Bukhari, the editor-in-chief of a local English daily 'Rising Kashmir', was shot dead outside his office in Srinagar

    Police To Ask US To Preserve Shujaat Bukhari's Social Media Data

    Lord Ayyappa’s 'Eternal Celibate’ Status Must Be Respected, Women Devotees Tell SC

    Lord Ayyappa’s 'Eternal Celibate’ Status Must Be Respected, Women Devotees Tell SC
    Women devotees, who ran “Ready to wait” campaign to support the restriction on entry of women in the age group of 10 to 50 years in Sabarimala Temple in Kerala, on Thursday told the Supreme Court that Lord Ayyappa’s right to privacy as an ‘eternal celibate’ must be respected.

    Lord Ayyappa’s 'Eternal Celibate’ Status Must Be Respected, Women Devotees Tell SC