More than 3,300 are dead and 6,500 people
injured after an earthquake in Nepal devastated the heavily crowded
Kathmandu valley. The most recent updates are:
But this time, the devastation was much greater than usual, as the country fell victim to its biggest seismic event in 80 years.
The
first problem was the power of the quake, coming in at magnitude 7.8,
which one expert described as similar to having 20 thermonuclear
hydrogen bombs – each many times greater than the atomic bomb that
devastated Hiroshima – ripping through the Kathmandu Valley.
Second, the epicentre of the earthquake was only 40 miles to the
north-west of the most highly populated part of Nepal, the capital city
of Kathmandu.
Further compounding the impact was the shallowness of the earthquake,
at just 10 to 15km below ground, meaning that the shaking was felt much
more strongly. Deeper quakes have more earth to absorb the shaking.
Earthquakes
are typically followed by a flurry of aftershocks, which tend to reduce
in strength and frequency as time goes on. These can be felt
hundreds of miles away. One such aftershock occurred just half an hour
after the main earthquake, with a magnitude of 6.6, and more than 20
others have followed since.
The concern is that, although the
magnitudes deteriorate, they can continue to inflict significant damage
on buildings already weakened by previous activity.
Nepal is
particularly susceptible to earthquakes because of its position at the
junction of the two giant tectonic plates that push Everest and the rest
of the Himalayan mountain range a few millimetres higher every year.
The upward climb of the world’s highest mountain range is accompanied
by numerous tremors as one giant slab of rock – the Indian tectonic
plate – moves northwards at a rate of two inches a year, pressing up
against another great slab – the Eurasian tectonic plate – in the
process, which geologically speaking is very fast.
As the plates
push against each other, friction generates stress and energy that
builds until the earth’s crust ruptures. It is this movement that
triggered the quake.
However, although the quake has caused
colossal damage, it could have been even worse. Most areas touched by
the earthquake lie on solid bedrock, which to an extent limits the
amount of shaking – with the exception of the Northern Plains, near the
Nepalese border, where the surface sands and silts shook more than the
solid rock elsewhere.
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