Are the Chile and Haiti quakes related?

| 1 Comment | No TrackBacks
We bring you the latest in our ongoing coverage of earthquakes. To recap what's happened recently: An magnitude 8.8 earthquake - one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded - struck Chile on February 27. A magnitude 7.0 earthquake devastated Haiti on January 12, killing upwards of 200,000 people. And in the meantime (as we reported earlier), scientists' fears that the Haiti quake forewarns increased seismic activity seem to have been realized. In light of the Chile quake, too, reports of the hundreds of small tremors that have been rocking Yellowstone National Park over the past few weeks are more troubling. As if all this wasn't enough, the United States Geological Survey is reporting that it recorded a magnitude 3.8 earthquake in northern Illinois (see also the NY Times article) - an area normally free of seismic activity.

One question on everyone's mind, then, is this: are the Chile and Haiti earthquakes in any way related? The answer is this:

They may have the same parent. Most seismologists agree that the Haitian quake didn't cause Saturday's event in Chile. Earthquakes occur when the stress on a tectonic plate overcomes the friction holding it in place. The last stress-relieving earthquake at this location in Chile occurred in 1835. Since then, friction has held the edge of the Nazca plate in place while the rest of it slid 10 to 12 meters underneath the neighboring South American plate. As a practical matter, that displacement was the sole cause of Saturday's earthquake. But displacement isn't the only thing stressing a tectonic plate. Tides, dammed-up rivers, and pressure from other shifting plates can play a supporting role. Major earthquakes may shift plates slightly and thus increase the stress along fault lines. If another earthquake was poised to happen at some point soon, the added stress from a first quake could serve as a catalyst. While the Haitian earthquake really wasn't big enough to have that effect in Chile, some seismologists believe the much stronger Sumatran quake of 2004--and maybe even the 1960 Chilean quake, the most powerful ever recorded--may have set the stage for both of them.

Unsettling (forgive the pun - it's probably not appropriate, to be honest). You can read more here.

Edit: Update: I neglected to mention that the Chile quake altered the earth's axis and shortened the length of the day.


Bookmark and Share

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.adverbly.net/mt/mt-tb.cgi/73

1 Comment

Pretty insightful post. Never thought that it was this simple after all. I had spent a good deal of my time looking for someone to explain this subject clearly and you’re the only one that ever did that. Kudos to you! Keep it up

Leave a comment:

Archives

Submit a link

Find something weird on the internet? Got a link you'd like us to post?
 Click here!  

Tag Cloud

Recent Comments

  • Dell Hann:
    Pretty insightful post. Never thought that it was this simple read more

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Richard published on March 3, 2010 8:30 PM.

An interesting look at Galactic Civil War-era propaganda was the previous entry in this blog.

Vast iceberg threatens ocean life, global climate is the next entry in this blog.