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Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

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Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre. Summary:. Credit EMSC. Page created by W. G. Huang. Taiwan. Credit EMSC. Page created by W. G. Huang. Page created by W. G. Huang. 全球的岩石圈之主要大板塊 MAJOR TECTONIC PLATES OF THE WORLD. 歐亞板塊 Eurasian. 北美板塊 North American. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre Page created by W. G. Huang Credit EMSC Summary: Magnitude Mw 8.0 Region NEAR COAST OF CENTRAL PERU Date time 2007-08-15 at 23:40:57.2 UTC Location 13.28 S ; 76.74 W Depth 40 km Distances 67 km W Chincha alta (pop 153,076 ; local time 18:40 2 007-08-15) 42 km SW San vicente de cañete (pop 25,517 ; local tim e 18:40 2007-08-15)
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Page 1: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

Earthquake InformationEuropean-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

Page created by W. G. HuangCredit EMSC

Summary:

Magnitude Mw 8.0

Region NEAR COAST OF CENTRAL PERU

Date time 2007-08-15 at 23:40:57.2 UTC

Location 13.28 S ; 76.74 W

Depth 40 km

Distances 67 km W Chincha alta (pop 153,076 ; local time 18:40 2007-08-15)42 km SW San vicente de cañete (pop 25,517 ; local time 18:40 2007-08-15)

Page 2: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

Page created by W. G. HuangCredit EMSC

Taiwan

Page 3: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

Page created by W. G. Huang

Page 4: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

歐亞板塊Eurasian

印度 -澳洲板塊Indian/Australian

非洲板塊African

太平洋板塊Pacific

南美板塊South American

北美板塊North American

南極板塊Antarctica

菲律賓板塊Philippines

加勒比海板塊Caribbean

納薩卡板塊Nazca

太平洋板塊Pacific

全球的岩石圈之主要大板塊MAJOR TECTONIC PLATES OF THE WORLD

Page created by W. G. Huang

Peru, like much of the west coast of North and South America, lies above an area of intense seismic activity and is no stranger to earthquakes. The nearby Nazca tectonic plate, which lies under the Pacific Ocean, is forced underneath the South American continental plate at a rate of about 4 cm a year. That may not sound a lot but it is enough to put huge strain on the earth's crust. The pressures are periodically released through earthquakes.

20070815’s quake

Page 5: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

'The earth was like jelly' - hundreds die in Peru quake, but Lima escapes

Scientists said the quake was a "megathrust" - the largest of earthquakes - similar to the Indian Ocean temblor in 2004 that generated a deadly tsunami. At least 200 people in the town of Pisco were reported trapped under a church which caved in during a service. "So much effort and our city is destroyed," the town's mayor, Mendoza Uribe, told local radio. About 70% of the port city of 60,000 people had been levelled, he said, weeping. "We don't have lights, water, communications. Most houses have fallen, churches, stores, hotels, everything is destroyed." Witnesses from the nearby town of Chincha said there were at least 30 bodies at the badly damaged hospital. With the weather being cold many of the homeless appealed for blankets. Damage to the city and province of Ica was "dramatic", according to the deputy health minister, José Calderón. The government declared a state of emergency in the affected areas, appealed for blood donations and mobilised thousands of police, soldiers and medical staff. It promised an "air bridge" to shuttle the most badly injured to Lima. Hospital doctors called off a planned strike. Telephone companies appealed to people to make emergency calls only. A quarter of Ica's buildings were said to have collapsed and several churches were badly damaged, with local media reporting that in one church falling masonry killed 17 worshippers. At least 57 bodies were brought to the morgue, and injured people crowded into a hospital which resembled a war zone, with blood on the floor, screaming children and overwhelmed medical staff, according to reports.

Rory Carroll, Latin America correspondentFriday August 17, 2007 Page created by W. G. Huang

Page 6: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

Yesterday, Peru's national disaster management authority estimated at least 450 were dead and 1,500 injured. The Red Cross said the toll was expected to rise. However the doomsday scenario did not happen: Lima, a vast metropolis of poorly built concrete which has suffered cataclysmic earthquakes in the past, shook violently but escaped with minor damage and only one recorded death. "It made waves and the earth was like jelly," Antony Falconi, 27, told the Associated Press. "Who isn't going to be frightened? The Earth moved differently this time." Another Lima resident, María Pilar Mena, 47, said it was the strongest tremor she had ever felt. "When the quake struck, I thought it would never end." The US Geological Survey said the epicentre was beneath the Pacific coast about 90 miles south-east of the capital. Four strong aftershocks ranging from 5.4 to 5.9 followed, the organisation said. In 1970 a 7.9-magnitude earthquake in the Andes north of Lima triggered a landslide which buried the town of Yungay, killing up to 66,000 people.

Rory Carroll, Latin America correspondentFriday August 17, 2007

Many people were forced to spend the night in local parks. Photograph: Karel Navarro/AP

Page created by W. G. Huang

Page 7: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

credit NOAA / PMEL / Center for Tsunami Research Page created by W. G. Huang

Research animations of the August 15, 2007 Peru tsunami propagation created with experimental runs of the MOST tsunami forecast model and including DART™ buoy data. Yellow squares indicate DART™ buoy locations. Click the image to animate (left) or enlarge (right).

The animation and graphic display qualitative and quantitative information about the tsunami propagation including tsunami wave interaction with ocean floor bathymetric features, and neighboring coastlines. The tsunami radiation pattern is indicated with color coded information about the maximum wave amplitude at different locations throughout the Pacific Ocean. The timer and moving yellow squares indicate time elapsed since time of the earthquake, providing an estimate of tsunami arrival time at different locations (left).

Page 8: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

Peru Earthquake (8/15/2007)

Page created by W. G. HuangCredit Tsunami Research Center, University of Southern California

Animation of the tsunami propagation over the Pacific Ocean. USC modeled the first 2 hours of the tsunami waves showing an energy distribution with a predominantly SSW orientation.

Maximum wave height distribution 10 hours after the earthquake in the vicinity of Peru.

Page 9: Earthquake Information European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre

The particle velocities recorded at 101B (near Taipei 101) with a depth of 100 meters

10 min.

EW

NS

V

Page created by W. G. Huang


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