Main Linking Earthquakes To Tsunami

Loading...

Flash Player 9 (or above) is needed to view presentations.
We have detected that you do not have it on your computer. To install it, go here.

0 comments

Post a comment

    Post a comment
    Embed Video
    Edit your comment Cancel

    Favorites, Groups & Events

    Main Linking Earthquakes To Tsunami - Presentation Transcript

      Asian tsunami could have made earthquake risk in Indonesia worse
      Earthquakes have been more common since the Asian Tsunami in 2004 that weakened fault lines around the world, according to a new study.
       
      By Louise Gray, Environment CorrespondentPublished: 6:42PM BST 01 Oct 2009
      The 2004 magnitude 9 earthquake beneath the ocean west of Sumatra in Indonesia was the second-largest quake ever measured. It killed an estimated 230,000 people, mostly in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand.
      This week earthquakes of slightly lower magnitudes happened along the same line, killing up to 1,000 on the island of Sumatra.
      A recent US study found that the 2004 earthquake weakened fault lines around the world, including California's San Andreas Fault.
      The research, that was published in the journal Nature on the day the latest earthquake in Indonesia hit, suggested the tsunami could have caused an increase in earthquakes around the world since.
      " An unusually high number of magnitude 8 earthquakes occurred worldwide in 2005 and 2006," said study co-author Fenglin Niu, associate professor of Earth science at Rice University. " There has been speculation that these were somehow triggered by the Sumatran-Andaman earthquake that occurred on Dec. 26, 2004."
      The study provided evidence for the first time that earthquakes like the 2004 tsunami could even affect fault lines like the San Andreas Fault 5,000 miles away.
      Separate research published in Nature also looked at the effect the Asian Tsunami had on the San Andreas Fault.
      The study by the Carnegie Institute in Washington measured how seismic waves from the 2004 quake weakened other fault lines and may help to predict earthquakes in the future.
    SlideShare Zeitgeist 2009

    + davedavedavedavedavedave Nominate

    custom

    71 views, 0 favs, 0 embeds more stats

    One of the news website articles to be used in conj more

    More info about this document

    © All Rights Reserved

    Go to text version

    • Total Views 71
      • 71 on SlideShare
      • 0 from embeds
    • Comments 0
    • Favorites 0
    • Downloads 0
    Most viewed embeds

    more

    All embeds

    less

    Flagged as inappropriate Flag as inappropriate
    Flag as inappropriate

    Select your reason for flagging this presentation as inappropriate. If needed, use the feedback form to let us know more details.

    Cancel
    File a copyright complaint
    Having problems? Go to our helpdesk?

    Categories