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Thu, 30 Sep 2021
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Earthquakes

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Garbage landslide kills at least 30 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

landslide
© AP
About 150 people were at the site when the landslide struck on Sunday
Dozens missing after huge landslide at decades-old landfill site near the capital buries squatters' makeshift homes.

At least 30 people have been killed and dozens are missing after a landslide struck at a massive garbage dump on the outskirts of Ethiopia's capital.

The landslide late on Saturday levelled more than 30 makeshift homes of squatters living inside the Koshe landfill on the outskirts of Addis Ababa, said Dagmawit Moges, head of the city's communications bureau.

Moges said most of the dead were women and children, and more bodies were expected to be found in the coming hours.

It was not immediately clear what caused Saturday night's disaster. "We expect the number of victims to increase because the landslide covered a relatively large area," he said.

Seismograph

Shallow 5.6 magnitude earthquake recorded in the Kermadec Islands region

GRAPH
A 5.6 magnitude earthquake occurred this morning in the Kermadec Islands region, Northeast of New Zealand's North Island.

The Seismology Unit of the Suva-based Department of Mineral Resources stated the moderate earthquake occurred at a depth of 10km at 5:10am.

The quake's source location was registered at 943km Northeast from Whangarei in New Zealand, 1159km South-southwest from Nuku'alofa in Tonga, and 1460km South-southeast from Suva.

The Seismology Unit has assured that this seismic activity did not pose any immediate threat to the Fiji region.
The map showing the epicentre of the 5.6 magnitude earthquake that occurred in the Kermadec Islands region in New Zealand.

The map showing the epicentre of the 5.6 magnitude earthquake that occurred in the Kermadec Islands region in New Zealand.

Seismograph

Scientists say 7.4 quake would cause ruptures from Los Angeles to San Diego

LA traffic
© Los Angeles Times
Imagine: 7.4 magnitude earthquake in the LA basin at rush hour...
A new study shows that it is possible for a 7.4 magnitude earthquake to affect an area as wide as Los Angeles to San Diego. The Long Beach Earthquake of 1933 had a magnitude of 6.4 and killed 120 people, but a 7.4 would be 30 times as powerful.

For such a devastating earthquake to take place, it would have to be the result of a rupture, not only the Newport-Inglewood fault in Orange and Los Angeles counties, but also in San Diego's Rose Canyon fault system, which has not moved since around the mid-1650s.

The study, published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, concluded that
"an end-to-end rupture of the offshore portion of the (Newport-Inglewood/ Rose Canyon) fault zone could, depending on rupture characteristics, produce a M 7.3 earthquake, or a M 7.4 event if a northern onshore segment is included. If rupture were to occur on the southern onshore portion of the fault as well, the magnitude would be even greater."
US Geological Survey's Valerie Sahakian, lead author of the study, told the Los Angeles Times, "These two fault zones are actually one continuous fault zone."

Previously, scientists have reported that there could be as much as a three-mile gap between the faults, but the new study posits that the faults are only separated by a distance of one and a quarter miles. Sahakian said, "That kind of characterizes it as one continuous fault zone, as opposed to two different, distinct fault systems," explaining that this characteristic makes it easier for an earthquake to spread, as its seismic reach widens.

Some seismologists have suggested that the two faults may be one over the last 30 years, but proving the theory requires finding the gap's underwater location. Now, researchers from UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, including Sahakian, spent 100 days aboard boats collecting data in 2013.

They generated data using a machine that sends acoustic waves to the sea floor. The information sent back helped researchers locate the faults and produce a more accurate map.

Egill Hauksson, a seismologist at Caltech not involved with the study said that the location of the faults, near the shoreline and with extremely watery soil, is a cause for concern. He explained, "you would see a lot of liquefaction in the coastal areas, which means there will be a lot of damage to all kinds of coastal structures or piers." The most-impacted areas in such a temblor would have to seek assistance from places as far away as Santa Barbara and the Inland Empire.

Sahakian advised, "Make sure your bookshelves are bolted to the wall. Always be prepared for a large earthquake."

Seismograph

Strong shallow earthquake of 5.9 magnitude west of Macquarie Island, Pacific Ocean

GRAPH
5.9 magnitude earthquake

UTC time: Thursday, March 09, 2017 11:14 AM
Magnitude Type: mww
USGS page: M 5.9 - West of Macquarie Island
USGS status: Reviewed by a seismologist
2017-03-09 11:14:26 UTC 5.9 magnitude, 10 km depth

Attention

Shallow magnitude 4.6 earthquake shakes Switzerland; largest for 12 years

Switzerland earthquake
© Swiss Seismology Service
This map shows where Monday's earthquake struck.
An earthquake of magnitude 4.6 on the Richter scale hit central Switzerland on Monday night, the Swiss Seismology Service (SED) has said. The quake struck at 9.12pm at a depth of 5km under the summit of the Ortstock mountain in the canton of Glarus, around 6km west of the town of Linthal, the SED announced on its website.

While no damage was reported, police in the cantons of Glarus and Schwyz told news agency ATS they received dozens of calls from worried residents who felt the quake.

The SED said it received reports that the quake was also felt in the cantons of Bern, Aargau, Zurich and Graubünden.

So many people visited the SED's website after the earthquake that it crashed, said the service.

About a dozen aftershocks were detected after the main event, with more to be expected in the coming days.

"It is unlikely that there will be an earthquake with a similar or even larger magnitude than the main shock but this cannot be excluded," it added.

Comment: More earthquakes than usual shook Switzerland last year


Fireball

SOTT Earth Changes Summary - February 2017: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

Fireball Illinois
Februrary 2017 continued on as January started. Massive flooding in California due to "atmospheric rivers" dumping large amounts of rain on coastal areas and snow on the Sierra Nevada. The snow melt from this caused further flooding in Nevada. Eastern Canada also experienced record snowfall, as did Iran, Kazakhstan, Afghanistan and Japan.

Wildfires broke out in Eastern Australia and New Zealand while record rainfall inundated Western Australia. Major flooding also hit several South American nations including Chile, Peru and Colombia.

There are at least 30 active volcanoes around the world right now, including a really impressive one in Guatemala. Massive earth cracks opened in Pakistan and Italy.

These are just some of the chaotic events we present in this month's Sott 'Earth Changes' video compilation.


Seismograph

Geologists: Offshore fault system running from San Diego to Los Angeles could produce magnitude 7.3 quake

Scripps research vessel
© Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego
In 2013, Scripps research vessel New Horizon towed a hydrophone array to map the bathymetry of the Newport-Inglewood/Rose Canyon fault zone.
A fault system that runs from San Diego to Los Angeles is capable of producing up to magnitude 7.3 earthquakes if the offshore segments rupture and a 7.4 if the southern onshore segment also ruptures, according to an analysis led by Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego.

The Newport-Inglewood and Rose Canyon faults had been considered separate systems but the study shows that they are actually one continuous fault system running from San Diego Bay to Seal Beach in Orange County, then on land through the Los Angeles basin.

"This system is mostly offshore but never more than four miles from the San Diego, Orange County, and Los Angeles County coast," said study lead author Valerie Sahakian, who performed the work during her doctorate at Scripps and is now a postdoctoral fellow with the U.S. Geological Survey. "Even if you have a high 5- or low 6-magnitude earthquake, it can still have a major impact on those regions which are some of the most densely populated in California."

The study, "Seismic constraints on the architecture of the Newport-Inglewood/Rose Canyon fault: Implications for the length and magnitude of future earthquake ruptures," appears in the American Geophysical Union's Journal of Geophysical Research.

Comment: See also:

USGS says 'no getting out of this': Major earthquake 'certain' to hit Southern California



Seismograph

Earthquake swarm rattles Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii

Kilauea quake swarm
© USGS
A flurry of earthquakes rattled the Kilauea volcano area Sunday morning.

The USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, which measures and tracks earthquakes, reports 31 earthquakes were recorded over a period of 42 minutes on Sunday. The activity began just before 6 a.m. on March 5. The swarm is located about 5 miles south of Volcano Village inside Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park (red dots in the USGS map above).

The strongest quake was measured at a magnitude 3.9. Most rest have been measured between magnitude 1.7 and 3.5.

The USGS "Did you feel it?" website received more than 30 felt reports within an hour of the largest earthquake, which occurred at 6:13 a.m. "Weak to light shaking, with maximum Intensity of IV, has been reported," scientists say. "At that intensity, damage to buildings or structures is not expected."

"The earthquakes were concentrated about 5-6 km (3-4 mi) southeast of Kīlauea's summit in an area between Hi'iaka and Koʻokoʻolau Craters on the Chain of Craters Road," reported the USGS HVO in a later media release. "The sequence consisted of 31 earthquakes over a period of about 42 minutes. The eight largest events had magnitudes ranging from 1.7 to 3.9 and depths of about 2-4 km (1-2 mi) beneath the surface."

Comment: There has been increased activity at Hawaii's Kilauea volcano in recent months:


Seismograph

Shallow 6.5 magnitude earthquake strikes off Papua New Guinea

PNG quake map
© USGS
An earthquake of 6.5 magnitude struck off the south coast of the island of New Britain in Papua New Guinea this morning.

According to the US Geological Survey the quake was at a depth of 33 kilometres, and struck struck east of the city Lae.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said there was no Pacific-wide tsunami threat.

Comment: A 5.1 magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of Papua New Guinea a couple of days ago.


Seismograph

Elderly resident dies during magnitude 5.9 earthquake in Surigao, Philippines

Socorro Celis (wearing red) died due to cardiac arrest during the magnitude 5.9 earthquake in Surigao City on Sunday

Socorro Celis (wearing red) died due to cardiac arrest during the magnitude 5.9 earthquake in Surigao City on Sunday
A 66-year-old woman died due to cardiac arrest during the magnitude 5.9 earthquake that hit Surigao City Sunday morning.

The victim was identified as Socorro Celis, a resident of Narciso corner Lopez Jaena Street in Surigao City.

"She was shaking so the doctor told us that she suffered from panic and high blood pressure. Her blood pressure may have risen". Nona Celis, the daughter of the victim, said.

The younger Celis explained that her mother also had high blood pressure during the stronger magnitude 6.7 earthquake last February. Nona said she was shocked that her mother did not survive Sunday's earthquake.