A huge earthquake may be
building beneath Bangladesh, the most densely populated nation on earth.
Scientists say they have new evidence of increasing strain there, where two
tectonic plates underlie the world’s largest river delta. They estimate that at
least 140 million people in the region could be affected if the boundary
ruptures; the destruction could come not only from the direct results of
shaking, but changes in the courses of great rivers, and in the level of land
already perilously close to sea level.
The newly identified threat is a
subduction zone, where one section of earth’s crust, or a tectonic plate, is
slowly thrusting under another. All of earth’s biggest known earthquakes occur
along such zones; these include the Indian Ocean quake and tsunami that killed
some 230,000 people in 2004, and the 2011 Tohoku quake and tsunami off Japan,
which swept away more than 20,000 and caused the Fukushima nuclear disaster. Up
to now, all known such zones were only under the ocean; this one appears to be
entirely under the land, which greatly multiplies the threat. The findings
appear in this week’s issue of Nature Geoscience.
Subduction-zone quakes generally
occur where plates of heavy ocean crust slowly dive offshore beneath the
lighter rocks of adjoining continents, or under other parts of the seafloor.
Sometimes sections get stuck against each other over years or centuries, and
then finally slip, moving the earth. Scientists knew of the plate boundary in
and around Bangladesh, but many assumed it to be sliding only horizontally near
the surface, where it sometimes causes fairly large, but less damaging
earthquakes in areas that are not as densely populated. However, the authors of
the new research say movements on the surface over the past decade show that
subduction is taking place below, and that part of the plate juncture is locked
and loading up with stress. They are not forecasting an imminent great earthquake,
but say it is an “underappreciated hazard.”
“Some of us have long suspected this
hazard, but we didn’t have the data and a model,” said lead author Michael
Steckler, a geophysicist at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory. “Now we have the data and a model, and we can estimate the size.”
He said strain between the plates has been building for at least 400 years–the
span of reliable historical records, which lack reports of any mega-quake. When
an inevitable release comes, the shaking is likely to be larger than 8.2, and
could reach a magnitude of 9, similar to the largest known modern quakes, said
Steckler. “We don’t know how long it will take to build up steam, because we
don’t know how long it was since the last one,” he said. We can’t say it’s
imminent or another 500 years. But we can definitely see it building.”
The newly identified zone is an
extension of the same tectonic boundary that caused the 2004 Indian Ocean
undersea quake, some 1,300 miles south. As the boundary reaches southeast Asia,
the complexity of the motions along it multiply, and scientists do not
completely understand all of them. But basically, they say, a giant plate
comprising India and much of the Indian Ocean has been thrusting northeasterly
into Asia for tens of millions of years.
This collision has caused the
Himalayas to rise to the north, bringing events like the 2015 Nepal quake that
killed 8,000 people. Bangladesh, India’s neighbor, lies on the far eastern edge
of this plate, but pressure from the collision seems to be warping Asia
clockwise around the top of Bangladesh, ending up largely in the next country
over, Myanmar. This wraparound arrangement has resulted in a crazy quilt of
faults and quakes in and around Bangladesh. Among the largest, a 1762 subduction-zone
quake near the southern coast killed at least 700 people. This January, a
magnitude 6.7 event in adjoining eastern India killed more than 20. There have
been dozens of large quakes in between, but the assumption was that no actual
subduction was taking place under Bangladesh itself, seeming to insulate the
region from a truly gigantic one. The new study undercuts this idea.
Starting in 2003, U.S. and
Bangladeshi researchers set up about two dozen ground-positioning (GPS)
instruments linked to satellites, capable of tracking tiny ground motions. Ten
years of data now show that eastern Bangladesh and a bit of eastern India are pushing
diagonally into western Myanmar at a rapid clip–46 millimeters per year, or
about 1.8 inches. Combined with existing GPS data from India and Myanmar, the
measurements show that much of the resulting strain has been taken up by
several known, slowly moving surface faults in Myanmar and India. But the rest
of the movement–about 17 millimeters, or two-thirds of an inch per year–is
shortening the distance from Myanmar to Bangladesh. This has been going on for
a long time, and the results are clearly visible: neatly parallel north-south
ranges of mountains draping the landscape, like a carpet being shoved against a
wall. The researchers interpret the shortening pattern to mean that subduction
is taking place below, and that a huge zone–about 250 kilometers by 250
kilometers, more than 24,000 square miles–is locked and building pressure, just
a few miles below the surface. The zone includes Bangladesh’s densely packed
capital of Dhaka, a megalopolis of more than 15 million.
Steckler says that, assuming fairly
steady motion over the last 400 years, enough strain has built for the zone to
jump horizontally by about 5.5 meters, or 18 feet, if the stress is released
all at once. If strain has been building longer, it could be up to 30 meters,
or almost 100 feet. The land would also move vertically, to a lesser extent.
This is the worst-case scenario; in the best case, only part would slip, and
the quake would be smaller and farther from Dhaka, said Steckler.
In any case, Bangladesh and eastern
India sit atop a landscape vulnerable even to moderate earthquakes: the vast
delta of the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers. This is basically a pile of mud as
deep as 12 miles, washed from the Himalayas to the coast, covering the
subduction zone. In a quake, this low-lying substrate would magnify the shaking
like gelatin, and liquefy in many places, sucking in buildings, roads and
people, said study coauthor Syed Humayun Akhter, a geologist at Dhaka
University. The great rivers–10 miles across in places–could jump their banks and
switch course, drowning everything in the way; there is in fact evidence that
such switches have happened in previous centuries.
Akhter says that fast-growing, poor
Bangladesh is unprepared; no building codes existed before 1993, and even now,
shoddy new construction flouts regulations. Past quake damages and deaths are
no indicator of what could happen now, he said; population and infrastructure
have grown so fast that even fairly moderate events like those of past
centuries could be mega-disasters. “Bangladesh is overpopulated everywhere,” he
said. “All the natural gas fields, heavy industries and electric power plants
are located close to potential earthquakes, and they are likely to be
destroyed. In Dhaka, the catastrophic picture will be beyond our imagination,
and could even lead to abandonment of the city.”
Roger Bilham, a geophysicist at the
University of Colorado who has studied the region but was not involved in the
new paper, said its “data are unassailable, the interpretation is sound.”
Bilham said the research “ties an enormous amount of structural interaction
together. We have seen in recent history only modest seismicity responding to
those interactions. The Indian subcontinent is effectively being pushed into a
tight corner.”
Susan Hough, a U.S. Geological
Survey seismologist who also studies the region and was not involved in the
study, said that in recent years, “we’ve been surprised by big earthquakes that
have not been witnessed during historical times, or witnessed so long ago, they
were forgotten. Studies like this are critical for identifying those zones.”
Scientists in Bangladesh and
neighboring countries continue to assess the hazards. James Ni, a seismologist
at New Mexico State University, said he and colleagues hope to deploy 70 seismometers
across Myanmar in 2017, to get a better image of the apparently subducting
slab. “We don’t have a good idea of its geometry, we don’t know how far it goes
down,” said Ni. He said that if the study authors are right, and the slab is
building strain, a quake would probably turn urban areas in eastern India “into
ruins,” and effects likely would extend into Myanmar and beyond. “We need more
data,” he said.
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