Amritsar, Ludhiana highly vulnerable to quakes
NEWDELHI: Amritsar, Ludhiana, Chandigarh, Ambala and Shimla are among 29 Indian cities and towns that fall under “severe” to “very severe” seismic zones, says the National Centre for Seismology (NCS).
NEW DELHI: Amritsar, Ludhiana and Chandigarh are among 29 Indian cities and towns that fall under “severe” to “very severe” seismic zones, says the National Centre for Seismology (NCS).
Majority of these places are in the Himalayas, one of the most seismically active regions in the world. Apart from the two Punjab cities, Chandigarh, Delhi, Patna, Srinagar, Kohima, Puducherry, Guwahati, Gangtok, Shimla, De hr a dun, Imp half all under seismic zones IV and V.
These cities have a combined population of over 3 crore.The Bureau of Indian Standards( BIS) has classified different regions in the country into zones I I to V, taking into consideration earthquake records, tectonic activities and damage caused, NC S director Vineet Gauhlat said. The NCS, which records earthquakes and carries out studies pertaining to microzonation of cities, comes under the India Meteorological Department (IMD). Seismic microzonation is the process of sub dividing a region into smaller areas having different potential for hazardous earthquake effects.
Zone II is considered the least seismically active, while Zone V is the most active. Zone IV and V fall under “severe” to “very severe” categories respectively. Zone V includes the entire northeastern region, parts of Jammu and Kashmir, Him ac hal Pradesh, Ut tar khand, Rann of Kutch, parts of north Bi ha rand the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago.
Parts of Jam mu and Kashmir, Delhi, Sikkim, northern Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Gujarat and a small part of Maharashtra fall under Zone IV. Bhuj, which was struck by a massive earthquake in 2001 in which 20,000 people were killed, Chandigarh, Ambala and Roorkee fall under zones IV and V. Kusala Rajendran, a professor at the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, and an expert on paleoseismology, earthquake recurrence and active tectonics, said most cities in the list have a high population density and fall in the In do-Gangetic plains.
“The Himalayan arc is known to be a high seismic zone and these cities in the Indo-Gangetic belt fall within reasonable limits of the Himalayas. So repercussions are bound to be felt there,” she observed. MR ajee van, secretary, ministry of earth sciences, said 31 new earthquake observatories will come up in the country by March next year.