The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Volcanos, quakes: Is the ‘Ring of Fire’ alight?

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TOKYO: A volcanic eruption in the Philippine­s forces mass evacuation­s, while another in Japan kills one person. Across the Pacific, a 7.9 magnitude earthquake hits off Alaska. So what’s the link?

The spate of activity around the so-called Ring of Fire has raised concerns that a major and potentiall­y deadly volcanic eruption or earthquake could be on the way. Here is what the experts say: Where are these events happening? The recent volcanic eruptions and earthquake­s occurred along a belt that runs around the Pacific Ocean and is known as the “Ring of Fire.”

Reaching from Indonesia to the coast of Chile in a 40,000 kilometre arc, the belt is home to most of the world’s active and dormant volcanos and is where the vast majority of earthquake­s occur.

It is an interconne­cted circle of fault lines – cracks in the Earth’s hardened upper crust – which are under constant pressure from super-hot molten rock beneath.

Occasional­ly the fissures give in and explode, creating volcanic eruptions and causing the land on either side of the fault line to shift and buckle violently, triggering earthquake­s. Why are they happening now? Earthquake­s occur around the Ring of Fire on a daily basis, but the recent string of quakes and eruptions sparked talk of an uptick, with the UN’s Office for Disaster Risk Reduction tweeting that the Ring of Fire was “active”.

“The Pacific rim is in a period of activity,” acknowledg­ed Toshiyasu Nagao, head of Tokai University’s Earthquake Prediction Research Centre.

“In terms of volcanic history, however, the current activity is still regarded as normal,” he told AFP.

“It’s not referred to as the ‘ring of fire’ because it sits there doing nothing ... it is normal to have so much activity,” tweeted volcanolog­ist Janine Krippner. Are these events linked? The recent spectacula­r eruptions and earthquake­s have caused some speculatio­n about a potential “domino effect,” but experts say that simply isn’t how the Ring of Fire works.

“Volcanic activity at each volcano is not correlated,” said Yosuki Aoki, assistant professor of physical volcanolog­y at the University of Tokyo.

He said volcanos “cycle through active and inactive periods, and this is part of it.”

“I don’t think something abnormal is taking place. This is pretty normal activity for Earth, the media is just reporting on more of them right now,” Krippner added on her Twitter account. Will there be more? The Ring of Fire has produced the world’s strongest recorded earthquake and volcanic eruption, but experts say the recent activity does not necessaril­y presage a major natural disaster.

“We cannot predict earthquake­s and volcanic eruptions. Earth science has not developed that far. Such prediction­s are often made routinely after major events. If you say that everyday for a long time, naturally you will get it right at some point,” said Shinji Toda, professor at the Internatio­nal Research Institute of Disaster Science at Tohoku University.

Nagao said the volcanic activity seen in Japan could continue, but that the region was experienci­ng a relatively quiet period for earthquake­s.

“In terms of earthquake­s, the region is not that active now. There was an earthquake in Alaska the other day, but quakes with such strength have occurred regularly in the region.” — AFP

 ??  ?? (From top left-clockwise) A fisherman piloting a traditiona­l boat as Mount Agung erupts, seen from Kubu sub-district in the Karangasem Regency on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali on Nov 28, 2017 u The Mayon volcano emitting lava, seen from the town of...
(From top left-clockwise) A fisherman piloting a traditiona­l boat as Mount Agung erupts, seen from Kubu sub-district in the Karangasem Regency on Indonesia’s resort island of Bali on Nov 28, 2017 u The Mayon volcano emitting lava, seen from the town of...

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