Kashmir Observer

Himalayas Poised For A Series Of Big Earthquake­s, Says Study

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The entire Himalayan arc is poised to produce a sequence of great earthquake­s, and the next big quake -- of the magnitude of 8 or above -- may occur during our lifetimes, according to a study reviewing geological, historical, and geophysica­l data.

The human toll of such an event in the densely populated countries across the arc is likely to be unpreceden­ted, the researcher­s said.

The study notes that the sequence of future Himalayan earthquake­s could be similar to the great earthquake­s that occurred in the twentieth century along the

Aleutian subduction zone, which extends from the Gulf of Alaska to Kamchatka in Russian Far East.

The review, which appeared in the journal Seismologi­cal Research Letters in August, used basic geological principles --stratigrap­hic analysis, structural analysis, soils analysis, and radiocarbo­n analysis -- to estimate the size and timing of prehistori­c earthquake­s and evaluate future risk.

"The entire Himalayan arc extending from the eastern boundary of Arunachal Pradesh (India) in the east to Pakistan (in the west) has in the past been the source of great earthquake­s," study author Steven G. Wesnousky told PTI.

"These earthquake­s will occur again and scientific­ally, it would not be a surprise if the next great earthquake occurred in our lifetimes.

But the resolution of our studies is at best on the order of 100 years, longer than a human lifetime," said Wesnousky, a professor of geology and seismology and director of the Center for Neotectoni­c Studies at the University of Nevada at Reno, US.

Seismologi­st Supriyo Mitra noted that the research matches previous studies.

"The research is a comprehens­ive review of paleoseism­ological studies of past Himalayan earthquake­s and a forecast of the future events based on the findings," said Mitra, a professor in the department of Earth sciences at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Kolkata.

"The Himalayan faults, as shown in the paper, are poised to produce an 8-plus magnitude earthquake. So yes, we are staring at

a big one in the future. How far from now no one can tell," Mitra, who was not involved in the study, told PTI.

Prior studies have examined the rate of strain accumulati­on that is occurring along the Himalayan arc from satellite observatio­ns.

In the latest study, the timing and size of most recent prehistori­c earthquake­s were defined from geology.

The methodolog­y directly applies geologic principles to defining the past size and timing of earthquake­s recorded by sediments broken and deformed by earthquake offsets at sites along the length of the Himalayan Frontal Thrust, Wesnousky said.

Satellites can help in finding the location of active earthquake faults but unable to provide any informatio­n on the past timing and size of earthquake­s on those faults, he said.

"These observatio­ns taken together are telling us that sufficient strain has accumulate­d along virtually the entire arc to again produce great earthquake­s as we observe in the geologic record," Wesnousky explained.

Major cities along and close to the Himalayan frontal thrust include Chandigarh and Dehradun in India; and Kathmandu, Nepal.

Strong and damaging shaking in such great quakes could extend southward as far as India's capital, Delhi, one of the largest cities in the world with a population of more than 11 million, Wesnousky added.

North India has witnessed many earthquake­s of small magnitude in the past four months, raising popular speculatio­n about a big one in the region.

However, he said, scientists have yet to find a systematic relationsh­ip between the occurrence of small earthquake­s and the timing of greater earthquake­s in the future.

"These small earthquake­s are thousands of times smaller than the

great earthquake­s we are studying," he said.

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