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Scientists
call for public awareness and a tsunami warning system.
A dozen major earthquakes of magnitude
7.0 or greater have occurred in the Caribbean near Puerto Rico,
the US Virgin Islands and the island of Hispaniola, shared by Haiti
and the Dominican Republic, in the past 500 years, and several have
generated tsunamis. The most recent major earthquake, a magnitude
8.1 in 1946, resulted in a tsunami that killed a reported 1,600
people.
With nearly twenty million people now
living in this tourist region and a major earthquake occurring on
average every 50 years, scientists say that it is not a question
of if it will happen but when. They are calling for the establishment
of tsunami early warning systems in the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico
and Atlantic Ocean, and better public education about the real tsunami
threats in these regions
In a new study published December 24th,
2004 in the Journal of Geophysical Research from the American Geophysical
Union, geologists Uri ten Brink of the US Geological Survey in Woods
Hole and Jian Lin of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)
report a heightened earthquake risk of the Septentrional fault zone,
which cuts through the highly populated region of the Cibao valley
in the Dominican Republic. In addition, they caution, the geologically
active offshore Puerto Rico and Hispaniola trenches are capable
of producing earthquakes of magnitude 7.5 and higher. The Indonesian
earthquake on December 26th, which generated a tsunami that killed
(to date) an estimated 150,000 people, came from a fault of similar
structure, but was a magnitude 9.0, much larger than the recorded
quakes near the Puerto Rico Trench.
The Puerto Rico Trench, roughly parallel
to and about 75 miles off the northern coast of Puerto Rico, is
about 900 km (560 miles) long and 100 km (60 miles) wide. The deepest
point in the Atlantic Ocean, the trench is 8,340 meters (27,362
feet) below the sea surface. The Hispaniola Trench parallels the
north coast of the Dominican Republic and Haiti, and is 550 km (344
miles) long and only 4,500 meters (14,764 feet) deep.
Earthquakes typically occur near faults
or fractures in the Earth's crust where rock formations, driven
by the movements of the crustal or tectonic plates that make up
the Earth's surface, grind slowly past each other or collide, building
up stress. At some point, stress overcomes friction and the rocks
slip suddenly, releasing seismic energy in the form of an earthquake,
which drops the stress in one area but raises the stress elsewhere
along the fault line. Eighty percent of earthquakes on Earth occur
on the sea floor and most of them along the plate boundaries.
Hispaniola, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin
Islands sit on top of small crustal blocks that are sandwiched between
the North American and Caribbean plates. The island of Hispaniola
faces a double risk: an earthquake from the Septentrional fault
on the island itself as the plates move past each other, and an
earthquake deep in the earth in the subduction zone on which the
island sits. Both could cause severe damage and loss of life, although
the researchers say an earthquake in the subduction zone could be
more devastating and has the potential to cause a tsunami.
The two scientists studied the geology
of the northern Caribbean plate boundary, looked at historical earthquake
data in the region, and used three-dimensional models to calculate
the stress changes in and near the trenches after each earthquakes.
Ten Brink, who is also an adjunct scientist at WHOI, and Lin say
stress has increased for the Hispaniola area, and that the potential
threat of earthquakes and resulting possible tsunamis from the Puerto
Rico and Hispaniola trenches is real and should be taken seriously.
In addition to establishing warning systems and informing the public
about the risk, they call for improved documentation of prior earthquake
and tsunami events and better estimates of future threats from the
Puerto Rico and Hispaniola trenches through underwater studies.
"Every earthquake has its own character,"
says Lin, who has studied mid-ocean ridges, hotspots and undersea
volcanoes as well as earthquakes in Southern California, China and
the Pacific. "And not all earthquakes generate tsunamis, which
form when large areas of the seafloor rise or drop suddenly, causing
the ocean above them to move. Many factors come into play in tsunami
formation, including the size and type of an earthquake and how
much the quake has ruptured the seafloor."
Lin, a senior scientist and a marine
geophysicist in the WHOI Geology and Geophysics Department, says
that each time an earthquake occurs on the offshore Puerto Rico
and Hispaniola trenches, it adds stress to the Septentrional fault
zone on Hispaniola. Since the fault is in a highly populated region
and is capable of generating magnitude 7.7-7.9 earthquakes, the
public should be educated about the risk of this earthquake prone
area.
The region has a long history of destructive
earthquakes. Historical records show that major earthquakes have
struck the Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands region many times during
the past 500 years although the locations and sizes of events that
occurred more than a few decades ago are poorly known. Major earthquakes,
greater than magnitude 7.0, damaged Puerto Rico in 1670, 1787, 1831,
1844, 1846, 1865, 1867, 1875, 1890, 1906, 1918, 1943 and 1946. The
1867,1918 and 1946 earthquakes were accompanied by destructive tsunamis.
"Our results indicate that great
subduction zone earthquakes, which often occur in the deep trenches
off shore, have the potential to add stress or trigger earthquakes
on other types of faults on the nearby islands," Lin says.
"We don't want people to overreact, just make them aware of
the potential risk of such rare and yet deadly events so they are
prepared. It is similar to knowing about hurricanes or tornadoes
and being prepared to react when one is coming."
Ten Brink, who studies earthquakes, tsunamis
and geology in the Caribbean and Puerto Rico region, and has studied
earthquake hazards in the Dead Sea in the Middle East, says there
are a number of possible sources for tsunamis in the Caribbean.
"The threat of major earthquakes in the Caribbean, and the
possibility of a resulting tsunami, are real even though the risks
are small in the bigger picture," Ten Brink said. "Local
earthquakes, such as from the fault on Hispaniola, or effects from
distant earthquakes can be severe. Landslides and volcanic eruptions
can also cause major earthquakes and potential tsunamis in this
region. It has happened before, and it will happen again."
He cautions that the threat of submarine landslides near Puerto
Rico is real and residents and tourists, including those on cruise
ships, would have very little warning given the close proximity
to shore. However, the risk is small and should be put into perspective.
The Puerto Rico Trench, which is capable
of producing earthquakes of magnitude 7 to 8 or greater, faces north
and east into the Atlantic Ocean. There are few land areas or islands
to block a tsunami generated near the Puerto Rico Trench from entering
the Atlantic Ocean. The direction of the waves would depend on many
factors, including where in the trench the earthquake occurred.
Long-term ocean observatories, new generations
of seismic and oceanographic sensors, and information technologies
offer great promise to earthquake and tsunami research, Lin says.
He and colleague Dezhang Chu of the WHOI Applied Ocean Physics and
Engineering Department received WHOI Institution seed funding in
2004 to develop a new technology to measure seafloor change, which
could be a step forwards in understanding the processes that trigger
underwater earthquakes and tsunamis.
Source: Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution (WHOI)

•Date:
13th January 2005 • Region: Various •Type:
Article •Topic:
Emergency planning
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