Nepal quake moves capital by up to several meters: Experts
Nepal quake moves capital by up to several meters: Experts
Tue Apr 28, 2015 4:32AM
This handout photo, taken on April 26, 2015 by
UNICEF, shows people walking through the ruins in the Nepalese city of
Bhaktapur after a 7.8 magnitude earthquake, April 25, 2015.
Experts
say the massive 7.8-magnitude earthquake that recently killed more than
4,300 people in Nepal has moved the ground beneath the capital,
Kathmandu, by up to several meters south.
University of
Cambridge tectonics expert James Jackson said Tuesday that early
seismological data obtained from sound waves show that the quake may
have shifted the earth beneath Kathmandu about three meters (10 feet)
southward.
Sandy Steacy, the head of the department of the
physical sciences at the University of Adelaide, also said Jackson’s
analysis is likely to be true.
“It’s likely that the earthquake
occurred on the Himalayan Thrust fault, a plate boundary that separates
the northern moving Indian sub-continent from Eurasia,” he said.
“The
fault dips about 10 degrees to the north-northeast. The relative
movement across the fault zone was on the order of three meters at its
greatest, just north of Kathmandu,” said Steacy.