Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

On shaky ground, Himachal records 40 quakes this year

Result of release of stress accumulati­ng beneath the surface, says state geologist

- Gaurav Bisht gaurav.bisht@htlive.com

SHIMLA: Forty earthquake­s have struck Himachal Pradesh so far this year, which experts say could be the precursor to a bigger “seismic event”.

“Tremors are the result of the release of stress accumulati­ng beneath the surface. The tectonic shift of the Himalayan plates causes them. The plates shift about 3cm annually. Smaller quakes release energy but there is no surety of a bigger one in the future,” says Puneet Guleria, the state geologist at the Himachal Pradesh industries and mining department.

A majority of the quakes that struck the state this year had their epicentre in Chamba and Mandi, the area north of the Main Boundary Thrust (MTB). While Chamba recorded 15 mild quakes, 10 had their epicentre in Mandi district.

A tremor of 4.1 magnitude rattled Mandi district at 9.32pm on November 16. Its epicentre was near Joginderna­gar, 27km north-west of Mandi town, at a depth of 5km. The quake was felt in neighbouri­ng Kullu, Hamirpur and Kangra districts. No loss of life or damage to property was reported, but people rushed out of their houses in panic.

This was the third earthquake to be felt in Himachal in November. A mild intensity quake of less than 3-magnitude struck Kangra and Chamba on November 5 and 6, respective­ly.

1,300 quakes in 100 years

A study carried out on seismicity in Himachal Pradesh finds that the seismicity in the frontal region is mainly controlled by the Main Boundary Thrust (MBT) to the north of Kangra and the Himalayan Frontal Thrust (HFT) in the south, separating the Punjab plains from the Upper Shivaliks.

“After perusing the epicentre data plotted, it has been found that Himachal has been rocked by more than 1,300 earthquake­s during the last 100 years,” says SS Randhawa, principal scientific officer at the State Centre for Climate Change in Shimla. Of them, 141 quakes were of the magnitude of 3 to 3.9 on the Richter Scale, 22 quakes had a magnitude of 4 to 4.9, 43 with a magnitude of 5 to 5.9, seven earthquake­s had a magnitude between 6 to 6.9 and only one had a magnitude of 8. That was the Kangra earthquake of 1905.

Two major clusters of quakes

The study reveals that there are two major clusters where the majority of the earthquake­s occurred. One of them is to the north of Dharamshal­a along the Dhauladhar range in Kangra and Chamba districts, whereas the other is to the east of Sundernaga­r valley and along the right bank of the Sutlej river.

The areas to the south of the MBT up to the Punjab plains show the scattered nature of past epicentres but they follow prominent trends of lineaments along the streams originatin­g from the Dhauladhar range.

All these streams follow a linear trend and are structural­ly controlled, which may have witnessed the epicentres of past quakes with a magnitudes of more than 5 on the Richter scale along the Pong Dam area in the Kangra valley.

The areas to the north of the MBT along the Dhauladhar range in Kangra and Chamba districts, and the areas to the east of the Sundernaga­r valley show dense and orthogonal pattern of past epicentres, which reflects that whatever stress/ strain is being accumulate­d within the earth’s crust is being released in the form of micro earthquake­s and thus chances for having a major quake in this part of the state are reduced to some extent but can’t be overruled, Guleria said.

In the areas to the south of the MBT, past epicentres are scattered in nature and some of the major earthquake­s are on the transverse lineaments along the major streams originatin­g from the Dhauldahar range. Thus, this part of the state falling within the Kangra valley, Una valley and along the Seer Khad in Hamirpur, Mandi and Bilaspur and Sirmaur is a seismic gap where although the major tectonic lines dominate the energy is not being released in the manner as it is on the northern part of the state. These areas can be termed as future locations for having earthquake­s in the state.

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