Headlines
After Nepal quake, India may be next: Experts
By
Trina Joshi New Delhi, April 26
In the wake of the strong
7.9 magnitude earthquake that killed over a 1,500 people in Nepal and
left a swathe of devastation in the northern Himalayas on Saturday,
experts said a temblor of equal intensity is "overdue" in northern
India."
"An earthquake of the same magnitude is overdue. That may
happen either today or 50 years from now... in the region of the
Kashmir, Himachal, Punjab and Uttrakhand Himalyas. Seismic gaps have
been identified in these regions," B.K. Rastogi, the director general of
the Ahmedabad-based Institute of Seismological Research, told IANS on
the phone.
This is because the movement of tectonic plates
generates stress over time, and rocks at the surface break in response.
When the stress accumulates, every 100 km stretch of the 2,000-km-long
Himalyas can be hit by a high-magnitude earthquake.
"The
accumulation of stress is going on everywhere. But where it will reach
the elastic limit, we don't know nor also when. But what we do know is
that it is happening everywhere," Rastogi added.
"With 20 such
locations that are prone to high-intensity earthquakes, it takes 200
years for an earthquake of this magnitude to happen on this belt. In
1833, the same epicentre - 80 km northwest of Kathmandu - an earthquake
of 7.5 magnitude had hit the region," he said.
According to the
India Meteorological Department (IMD), Saturday's quake, measuring 6 on
the Richter scale in Delhi, had a depth of 10 km and its impact lasted
up to one minute.
The US Geological Survey said the epicentre
was in Nepal's Lamjung district some 75 km from Kathmandu. The
aftershocks were felt even half-an-hour after the quake and some lasted
till evening.
Rastogi said that the earthquake uplifted the rocks
by four meters, rupturing an area 100 km long and 50 meters wide of the
epicentre.
Scientist P.R. Vaidya at IMD here, said Nepal falls
on the Alpine-Himalayan belt, one among the three seismic belts on the
Earth's surface, which is responsible for 10 percent of the world's
earthquakes.
The Apline-Himalayn belt, which is prone to
high-intensity earthquakes, runs through New Zealand, Australia,
Indonesia, the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and northeast India, from
where it turns to Nepal and then to Jammu and Kashmir, up to Afghanistan
and the Mediterranean Sea. It finally ends in Europe.
The
world's greatest earthquake belt, the circum-Pacific seismic belt, is
found along the rim of the Pacific Ocean, where about 80 percent of the
world's largest temblors occur.
Rastogi said within the
40-km-range of the epicentre, the scale of damage has been very high,
with a total collapse of buildings.
The aftershocks, he added, would be felt for two days in case of a "strong" earthquake" of about magnitude 8.
"Even
small buildings that were hit in the first wave may be damaged by the
aftershocks if not designed properly. And the aftershocks may continue
for one or two months," he said.
About 40 million years ago,
India was 5,000 km south of where the Himalyas now stand. With the
continental shift, India and the Asian continent came closer to form the
Himalayas.
"And the process of movement continues at about two
cm every year. The Indian landmass today is pushing the Asian landmass
and that generates stress," Rastogi said.
Scientist Vaidya said:
"Earthquakes happen because of the theory of plate tectonics, which
means with the movement of tactonic plates, stress in generated in the
rocks."
The quake claimed nearly 40 lives in India, causing widespread destruction in parts of Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.
Earthquakes, however don't kill, said Vaidya. "It's the damage caused to the structures around us that cause the loss of life."
(Trina Joshi can be contacted at [email protected])