1957 Mongolia earthquake

Last updated

1957 Mongolia earthquake
Relief map of Mongolia.png
Green pog.svg
Ulaanbaatar
Bullseye1.png
UTC  time1957-12-04 03:37:53
ISC  event 887636
USGS-ANSS ComCat
Local dateDecember 4, 1957 (1957-12-04)
Local time11:37:53
Magnitude Mw 7.8–8.1, Ms 8.0–8.5 [lower-roman 1]
Depth20.0 km [8]
Epicenter 45°11′20″N99°22′05″E / 45.189°N 99.368°E / 45.189; 99.368
Areas affected Mongolian People's Republic
Max. intensity XII (Extreme) [7]
AftershocksYes, Ms 6.5 [7] & M 6.8 [9]
Casualties30 [10]

An earthquake occurred in southern Mongolia on December 4, 1957, measuring Mw 7.8–8.1 and assigned XII (Extreme) on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale. Surface faulting was observed in the aftermath with peak vertical and horizontal scarp reaching 9 m (30 ft). Because of the extremely sparse population in the area, this event, despite its magnitude, was not catastrophic. However, 30 people died and the towns of Dzun Bogd, Bayan-leg and Baruin Bogd were completely destroyed.

Contents

Tectonic setting

As the Indian Plate collides with the Eurasian Plate, the force of the collision causes deformation. [11] A primary effect of this collision is the uplift of the Himalayas; however, deformation extends further. [12] In Mongolia, escape tectonics created a network of active faults to support the strike-slip stresses. [13] During this earthquake, two main faults sustained a rupture: the thrust Gurvan Bulag fault, and the related strike-slip Bogd fault. [14] [12] The Gurvan Bulag has a slip rate of 1.05 ± 0.25 mm (0.0413 ± 0.0098 in)/yr for the vertical component, with slip rate increasing at the end of the Pleistocene epoch. [14] Paleoseismological investigation revealed that the average recurrence interval of earthquakes like the 1957 event on the fault had decreased from 50 kyr [lower-roman 2] to 3-14 kyr in the late Pleistocene. [14] The Bogd fault is a large left-lateral strike-slip fault. [12] It is split into five distinct segments. [12] Slip rates vary between segments, but it is between 0.5–1 mm (0.020–0.039 in)/yr overall. [12] Recurrence intervals of 1957 type events on the Bogd fault have been calculated at around 1,000 years. [15] Other large (Mw 8.0+) earthquakes had struck Mongolia in the previous half century, including the 1905 Tsetserleg, 1905 Bolnai, and 1931 Fuyun earthquakes. Some studies indicate that these earthquakes triggered each other, with the earlier ones triggering the later events. [16] [17]

Earthquake

The earthquake struck southern Mongolia at 11:37:53 local time on December 4, 1957. Rupture was complex, with multiple scenarios proposed. The original hypothesis was that the earthquake occurred along the strike-slip Bogd fault and ruptured for 560 km (350 mi), [1] however, the more recently adopted conclusion is that there was a 250–300 km (160–190 mi) [15] long strike-slip rupture at a width of 20–30 km (12–19 mi) with 100 km (62 mi) of simultaneous reverse faulting in a roughly east-west direction. [14] [18] [19] [13] Offsets from surface rupture reached up to 8.85 m (29.0 ft) of strike-slip rupture, [18] with 9 m (30 ft) vertical offsets, [15] and an average slip of 3–4 m (9.8–13.1 ft). [13] [14] According to a study on the earthquake's surface rupture, the authors consider the rupture the "world's best preserved surface rupture of a great earthquake". [20] The average slip decreased from west to east. [12] Ruptured fault splays were observed up to 30 km (19 mi) away from the main fault trace. [13] Large aftershocks struck the epicentral region after the mainshock. Shortly after the mainshock, a Ms 6.5 event struck. [7] On April 7, 1958, another large earthquake measuring M 6.8 struck, located in the epicentral region of the mainshock. [9]

Impact

Despite attaining the maximum value on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale of XII (Extreme), the earthquake did not cause significant disruption to population centers owing to its remote and unpopulated location. [21] Dzun Bogd, Bayan-leg and Baruin Bogd, however, were destroyed. [9] Due to good weather, shepherds of these herding communities were outside, which limited the death toll to 30. [9] [21] Major geological effects were also observed. Surface offsets reaching 9 m (30 ft) of both strike-slip and vertical motion were observed after the event. [18] [15] Subsidence was also observed. At the Bakhar Mountains  [ ceb ], a 15 km (9.3 mi) long and 800 m (2,600 ft) wide portion of the earth subsided due to the earthquake. [9] In the Bitüüt valley, a large landslide was triggered. [20]

See also

Notes

  1. M 7 3/4 - 8, [1] Mw 7.78-7.95, [2] [3] Mw 8.1, [4] Ms 8.0, [5] Ms 8.3, [6] Ms 8.5 [7]
  2. kyr = thousand years

Related Research Articles

Coulomb stress transfer is a seismic-related geological process of stress changes to surrounding material caused by local discrete deformation events. Using mapped displacements of the Earth's surface during earthquakes, the computed Coulomb stress changes suggest that the stress relieved during an earthquake not only dissipates but can also move up and down fault segments, concentrating and promoting subsequent tremors. Importantly, Coulomb stress changes have been applied to earthquake-forecasting models that have been used to assess potential hazards related to earthquake activity.

The 1999 Hector Mine earthquake occurred in Southern California, United States, on October 16 at 02:46:50 PDT. Its moment magnitude was 7.1 and the earthquake was preceded by 12 foreshocks, the largest of which had a magnitude of 3.8. The event is thought to have been triggered by the 1992 Landers earthquake which occurred seven years earlier. It also deformed nearby faults vertically and horizontally. The earthquake's hypocenter was at a depth of 20 kilometers and its epicenter at 34.603° N 116.265° W.

Strike-slip tectonics or wrench tectonics is a type of tectonics that is dominated by lateral (horizontal) movements within the Earth's crust. Where a zone of strike-slip tectonics forms the boundary between two tectonic plates, this is known as a transform or conservative plate boundary. Areas of strike-slip tectonics are characterised by particular deformation styles including: stepovers, Riedel shears, flower structures and strike-slip duplexes. Where the displacement along a zone of strike-slip deviates from parallelism with the zone itself, the style becomes either transpressional or transtensional depending on the sense of deviation. Strike-slip tectonics is characteristic of several geological environments, including oceanic and continental transform faults, zones of oblique collision and the deforming foreland of zones of continental collision.

Earthquake forecasting is a branch of the science of seismology concerned with the probabilistic assessment of general earthquake seismic hazard, including the frequency and magnitude of damaging earthquakes in a given area over years or decades. While forecasting is usually considered to be a type of prediction, earthquake forecasting is often differentiated from earthquake prediction, whose goal is the specification of the time, location, and magnitude of future earthquakes with sufficient precision that a warning can be issued. Both forecasting and prediction of earthquakes are distinguished from earthquake warning systems, which, upon detection of an earthquake, provide a real-time warning to regions that might be affected.

In seismology, a supershear earthquake is an earthquake in which the propagation of the rupture along the fault surface occurs at speeds in excess of the seismic shear wave (S-wave) velocity. This causes an effect analogous to a sonic boom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">856 Damghan earthquake</span> Earthquake in Iran

The 856 Damghan earthquake or the 856 Qumis earthquake occurred on 22 December 856. The earthquake had an estimated magnitude of 7.9, and a maximum intensity of X (Extreme) on the Mercalli intensity scale. The meizoseismal area extended for about 350 kilometres (220 mi) along the southern edge of the eastern Alborz mountains of present-day Iran including parts of Tabaristan and Gorgan. The earthquake's epicenter is estimated to be close to the city of Damghan, which was then the capital of the Persian province of Qumis. It caused approximately 200,000 deaths and is listed by the USGS as the sixth deadliest earthquake in recorded history. This death toll has been debated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Altyn Tagh fault</span>

The Altyn Tagh Fault (ATF) is a 2,000 km long, active, sinistral strike-slip fault that forms the northwestern boundary of the Tibetan Plateau with the Tarim Basin. It is one of the major sinistral strike-slip structures that together help to accommodate the eastward motion of this zone of thickened crust, relative to the Eurasian Plate. A total displacement of about ~475 km has been estimated for this fault zone since the middle Oligocene, although the amount of displacement, age of initiation and slip rate are disputed.

The 1931 Fuyun earthquake (富蕴地震) occurred on August 10 at 21:18 UTC. The epicenter was near Fuyun County of northern Xinjiang, China. It was a Mw 8.0 earthquake and had a surface rupture of 171 km with a maximal horizontal displacement of 14 m along the Koktokay-Ertai fault zone (可可托海-二台断裂带). The Koktokay-Ertai fault has a slip rate of 4±2 mm per year. The rupture of this earthquake was caused by right-lateral strike-slip movement with normal component. The rupture is well preserved and becomes one of the main features of the Koktokay National Geopark (可可托海国家地质公园) located in Koktokay.

The 1932 Changma earthquake occurred at 10:04:27 local time on 25 December. With an estimated magnitude of 7.6 on the surface wave magnitude scale, and a maximum felt intensity of X (Extreme) on the Mercalli intensity scale, the quake destroyed 1,167 houses and caused 275 to 70,000 deaths and 320 injuries.

The 1931 Myitkyina earthquake, or also known as the 1931 Kamaing earthquake, occurred on January 28 at 02:35 local time. It was located in northern Burma, then part of British India. The magnitude of this earthquake was put at Mw 7.6. According to some sources the depth was 35 km, and according to a study of Phyo M. M. the depth was 5 to 30 km.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Intraplate deformation</span>

Intraplate deformation is the folding, breaking, or flow of the Earth's crust within plates instead of at their margins. This process usually occurs in areas with especially weak crust and upper mantle, such as the Tibetan Plateau. Intraplate deformation brings another aspect to plate tectonic theory.

The 1905 Tsetserleg earthquake occurred in or near the Tsetserleg Sum of Khövsgöl Province in Mongolia on 9 July 1905. The earthquake has been estimated at 7.9 to 8.3 on the moment magnitude scale.

The 1905 Bolnai earthquake occurred in or near the Asgat Sum of Zavkhan Province in Mongolia on 23 July. The earthquake has been estimated at 8.25 to 8.4 on the moment magnitude scale.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Haiyuan Fault</span> Intracontinental strike-slip fault in Tibet

The Haiyuan Fault is a major active intracontinental strike-slip (sinistral) fault in Central Asia.

The 1850 Xichang earthquake rocked Sichuan Province of Qing China on September 12. The earthquake which caused major damage in Xichang county had an estimated moment magnitude of 7.6–7.9 Mw  and a surface wave magnitude of 7.5–7.7 Ms . An estimated 20,650 people died.

The 1923 Renda earthquake occurred on March 24 at 20:40 local time between the counties of Daofu and Luhuo in Sichuan, China. The estimated Ms 7.3 earthquake was assigned a maximum modified Mercalli intensity scale rating of X (Extreme). Severe damage occurred in Sichuan, killing an estimated 4,800 people.

The 1955 Zheduotang earthquake, also known as the Kangding earthquake occurred on April 14 at 09:29:02 local time near the city of Kangding in the Garzê Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan. The earthquake had a moment magnitude of 7.0 and a surface wave magnitude of 7.1 and struck at a depth of 10 km. Severe damage occurred in Kangding with the loss of 70 lives.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Earthquake cycle</span>

The earthquake cycle refers to the phenomenon that earthquakes repeatedly occur on the same fault as the result of continual stress accumulation and periodic stress release. Earthquake cycles can occur on a variety of faults including subduction zones and continental faults. Depending on the size of the earthquake, an earthquake cycle can last decades, centuries, or longer. The Parkfield portion of the San Andreas fault is a well-known example where similarly located M6.0 earthquakes have been instrumentally recorded every 30–40 years.

The Keichō–Fushimi earthquake struck Japan on September 5, 1596. The earthquake measuring 7.5 ± 0.25 MJMA produced intense shaking across the Kansai region. Devastation was recorded in Kyoto and over 1,200 people perished.

The 1992 Joshua Tree earthquake occurred at 9:50:25 p.m. PDT on April 22 in Southern California. The magnitude 6.2 earthquake struck under the Little San Bernardino Mountains, near the town of Joshua Tree, California. Though no deaths were reported, the earthquake caused 32 injuries. A maximum Mercalli intensity of VII was observed in Joshua Tree and caused light to moderate damage. The event preceded the Landers and Big Bear earthquakes by two months but is now recognized as the beginning of a series of major earthquakes that culminated in two events on June 28, 1992.

References

  1. 1 2 Ben-Menahem & Toksöz 1962, p. 1943.
  2. Rizza et al. 2011, p. 918.
  3. Molnar & Qidong 1984, p. 6210.
  4. "M 8.1 - 153 km SW of Bayanhongor, Mongolia". United States Geological Survey. United States Geological Survey . Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  5. Okal 1976.
  6. Kanamori 1977.
  7. 1 2 3 4 Aptikaev & Erteleva 2019.
  8. Vergnolle, Pollitz & Calais 2003.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Rothé 1969.
  10. Bath 1973.
  11. Rizza et al. 2011, p. 898.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rizza et al. 2011.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Molnar & Qidong 1984.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 Ritz et al. 2003.
  15. 1 2 3 4 Baljinnyam et al. 1993.
  16. Chéry, Carretier & Ritz 2001.
  17. Pollitz, Vergnolle & Calais 2003.
  18. 1 2 3 Chen & Molnar 1977.
  19. Ben-Menahem 1977.
  20. 1 2 Kurushin et al. 1998.
  21. 1 2 "Summary of the earthquake". United States Geological Survey. United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on June 26, 2015. Retrieved June 25, 2015.

Sources