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1900 San Narciso earthquake

The 1900 Venezuelan earthquake (also known as the San Narciso earthquake (Español: 1900 terremoto de San Narciso)), occurred on October 28 at between 4:30 and 4:45 am local time. This earthquake had an epicenter off Miranda State or near the Venezuelan capital Caracas, in the Cariaco Basin. It had an estimated moment magnitude of 7.6–7.7 and a surface-wave magnitude of 7.7–8.4. It had a maximum Mercalli intensity assigned VIII–X, causing landslides and liquefaction events. Many buildings were severely damaged or collapsed during the earthquake. It is thought to be the last great earthquake of the 19th century and the largest instrumentally recorded in the republic, having been felt throughout.[6]

1900 Venezuelan earthquake
Caracas
UTC time1900-10-29 09:11:00
ISC event16957719
USGS-ANSSn/a
Local dateOctober 29, 1900 (1900-10-29)
Local time04:30–04:45 VET
Magnitude7.6–7.7 Mw[1]
7.7–8.4 Ms
Depth15 km (9.3 mi)
Epicenter11°00′N 66°00′W / 11.0°N 66.0°W / 11.0; -66.0
TypeStrike-slip
Max. intensityMMI VIII (Severe)MMI X (Extreme) [2]
IX (ESI 2007)
Tsunami5 meters[3]
Casualties140 dead,[4] 50+ injured[5]

Earthquake edit

The earthquake was associated with strike-slip faulting along either the La Tortuga or San Sebastián faults. These two faults are thought to be striking east–west off the northern Venezuelan coast. A recent study in 2015, concluded that the San Sebastián Fault was the structure responsible for this earthquake. The San Sebastián Fault is submarine for most of its length. Its onshore trace is parallel to the southern flanks of the Venezuelan Coastal Range. Older studies including one in 1984 assigned the San Sebastián Fault as the source after reassessing the earthquake intensity data. Audemard in 2002 used the idea of a seismic gap around the region where the earthquake struck. The rupture extent caused by the 1900 earthquake is located between that of the 1812 and 1853 earthquakes. Ocean-bottom surveys found young seafloor deformation and fault scarps which are evidence of the 1900 rupture. A rupture length of 220 km for an Mw  7.6 and 270 km for a Mw  7.7 with an average slip depth at 15 km has been suggested.[7]

Magnitude edit

This earthquake is larger than the magnitude 7.5 1812 Caracas earthquake, but was far less destructive. With a magnitude of 7.7 on the surface wave and moment magnitude scales, it is the largest instrumentally recorded earthquake in Venezuela.[7] The National Geophysical Data Center catalog lists this earthquake as having a surface wave magnitude of 8.4 while a 1983 catalog placed that figure at 7.7.[2][8] Charles Francis Richter also assigned the earthquake at Ms  8.4 in his 1958 book Elementary seismology.[9][10] In a 1992 catalog and 2020 study, this event was assigned Mw  7.6.[11]

Aftershocks edit

More than 250 aftershocks were recorded in the months following the main event. The aftershocks were disruptive to the local population. An aftershock is claimed to have woken then President of Venezuela Cipriano Castro in the middle of the night. Frightened by the tremors, he leaped off one of the windows of the Yellow House and suffered a broken ankle.[12]

Impact edit

With an epicenter in the Caribbean Sea, the earthquake badly affected the north-central Venezuelan coast. In the central region, the earthquake resulted in shaking as high as IX on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale, covering a 3,560 km2 region around the epicenter. The seaside cities of Macuto, Guarenas and Guatire were the most severely affected by the earthquake. The Los Roques archipelago in the Caribbean Sea suffered heavy impact, reportedly having the highest number of victims. Twenty-five people were killed in Guarenas.[2]

Large landslides and liquefactions took place in Anzoátegui, Aragua, Carabobo, Distrito Capital, Miranda and Vargas. The heavily populated localities that were affected include Barcelona, Onoto and Carenero. Some slight damage was reported in San Antonio de Los Altos, Paparo, Panaquire, Guarenas, Capaya, La Tortuga Island, Los Roques archipelago, Güigüe, San Diego, Clarines, Puerto Cabello and Caucagua.[13]

Iglesia de San Francisco, a church in Caracas, was severely damaged. Another church in Naiguatá was completely destroyed. In Macuto, landslides buried or destroyed railway lines serving the cities Caracas and La Guaira. Guatire saw 237 homes, a parish church, government house, and court offices damaged or collapsed.[12] In Guarenas, some 72 homes toppled.[14]

The total death toll from the earthquake is estimated to be over 140.[4] At least 50 people were injured.

Effects on landscape and hydrological features edit

At a seaside port in Barcelona named El Rincón, built on alluvium deposits from the Neverí River, many large cracks opened in the ground. Some cracks were longer than 300 meters. A 400 m2 area of alluvium in the city subsided significantly due to lateral spreading as a result of ground failure. Field observations also noted that an opening of the Neverí River was narrowed by more than two meters, while its water level rose. The water level in a number of saline wells rose substantially by several meters and began sloshing violently.[13]

Along the Unare River in Anzoátegui, portions of its bank slumped into the water. Large and deep fissures opened, ejecting mud and water. Seiches formed along the river, causing water to breach the channel by seven meters. A man was caught in the waves when he was taking a bath but managed to escape.[13]

In Carenero, Miranda, the ground sprouted black water that smelled of sulfur. Liquefaction caused several homes and other buildings to sink partially.[13]

Hot springs located near San Diego, Anzoátegui dired up some time after the earthquake.[13]

Residents living around Lake Tacarigua also described violent seiches in the lake as well as loud noises compared to that of a sea. They added that large flames and fire shot out of the ground near the lake shores.[13]

A 100-meter wide landslide buried and sealed off a section of the Caracas-La Guaira highway between Guaracarumbo and Ojo de Agua.[13]

Tsunami edit

A tsunami flooded the low-lying near shore zones of northern Venezuela. Waves swept into the Los Roques archipelago and north-central Venezuelan coasts. It manifested in the form of tidal bores at the mouth of the Neverí River which resulted in the rise in water level. The tsunami is estimated to be 1–meter high.[13] Witnesses at the coast at the mouth of the Guapo River in Puerto Tuy, Miranda reported seeing large waves up to 10 meters high, although this claim is disputed. Because the earthquake struck in complete darkness, before sunrise, it is unlikely the eyewitnesses could have a clear view of the wave. In addition, it is nearly impossible for them to survive being struck by the 10-meter tsunami. The small village of Paparo was partially submerged by the waves. A better estimate of the maximum tsunami wave height is 5 meters at Barlovento.[3] The tsunami may have been generated by a submarine landslide or significant vertical slip mechanism associated with faulting.

Legacy edit

The earthquake of 1900 was a catalyst in expanding research in seismology in Venezuela due to its size and being one of the last great historical earthquakes at the time. The first seismic instruments were brought into the country in the aftermath of the earthquake and installed at the Cagigal Observatory in November 1900 to early 1901.[12][15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Vásquez, R; Guzmán, A L; Rodríguez, J A; Colón, S; Audemard, F; Cabas, Mauricio (2020). "Magnitude estimation of the 1900 earthquake in Venezuela based on its coseismic effects". IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering. 872 (1): 012034. Bibcode:2020MS&E..872a2034V. doi:10.1088/1757-899X/872/1/012034. hdl:11323/6540. ISSN 1757-899X. S2CID 222118329. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "Significant Earthquake Information". NCEI/WDS Global Significant Earthquake Database. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Retrieved August 2, 2022.
  3. ^ a b Franck Albert Audemard M.; Alejandra F. Leal Guzman (2017). "Reliability of first-hand accounts on the study of historical tsunamis in northeastern Venezuela (southeastern Caribbean Sea)". Annals of Geophysics. 60 (6). doi:10.4401/ag-7437. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  4. ^ a b Ferrer D., Cluff L. (1969). "Caracas, Venezuela earthquake of July 29, 1967" (PDF). Soil Engineering and Engineering Geology Observations. Proceedings of the 4th world conference on earthquake engineering. Santiago, Chile. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  5. ^ José Grases; Arnaldo Gutiérrez; Rafael Salas J. "LA INGENIERÍA SISMO-RESISTENTE" (PDF). p. 3. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  6. ^ "Tragedia de San Narciso. Terremoto de Caracas ocurrido en el año de 1900" (in Spanish). Radiorescate. 14 February 2019. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  7. ^ a b Colón, S.; Audemard, F.A.; Beck, C.; Avila, J.; Padrón, C.; De Batist, M.; Paolini, M.; Leal, A.F.; Van Welden, A. (2015). "The 1900 Mw 7.6 earthquake offshore north–central Venezuela: Is La Tortuga or San Sebastián the source fault?". Marine and Petroleum Geology. 67. Elsevier BV: 498–511. Bibcode:2015MarPG..67..498C. doi:10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2015.06.005. ISSN 0264-8172.
  8. ^ K. Abe, S. Noguchi (1983). "Revision of magnitudes of large shallow earthquakes, 1897–1912". Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors. 33 (1): 1–11. Bibcode:1983PEPI...33....1A. doi:10.1016/0031-9201(83)90002-X. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  9. ^ Charles Francis Richter (1958). Elementary seismology (1 ed.). WH Freeman & Co. p. 768.
  10. ^ Suárez, Gerardo; Nábělek, John (10 October 1990). "The 1967 Caracas Earthquake: Fault geometry, direction of rupture propagation and seismotectonic implications". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 95 (B11): 17459–17474. Bibcode:1990JGR....9517459S. doi:10.1029/JB095iB11p17459.
  11. ^ J.F. Pacheco, L.R. Sykes (1992). "Seismic moment catalog of large shallow earthquakes, 1900 to 1989". Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 82 (3): 1306–1349. Bibcode:1992BuSSA..82.1306P. doi:10.1785/BSSA0820031306. S2CID 132108756. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  12. ^ a b c "El movimiento telúrico tuvo una magnitud de 8,0". www.funvisis.gob.ve (in Spanish). Venezuelan Foundation for Seismological Research. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Sirel Colón, Alejandra Leal, Franck Audemard, Raquel Vásquez, José Antonio Rodríguez (2019). "Análisis macrosísmico del sismo MW~7,6 de san narciso del 29 de octubre de 1900, aplicando la escala medio–ambiental de intensidad sísmica ESI 2007" [Macroseismic analysis of the earthquake MW ~ 7.6 in San Narciso of October 29, 1900, applying the environmental scale of seismic intensity ESI 2007]. Journal of the Faculty of Engineering (in Spanish). 34 (1). ISSN 2443-4477. Retrieved 12 June 2021.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Liendo, Daniel (2019). "A 119 años del Sismo de San Narciso el Gobierno Bolivariano promueve una cultura sísmica en comunidades y escuelas". minci.gob.ve (in Spanish). Ministry of Communication and Information. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  15. ^ R. Altez; J. Grases (2004). "A brief history of a restless vision: seismological research in Venezuela". Annals of Geophysics. 47 (2–3). doi:10.4401/ag-3312. Retrieved 13 June 2021.

External links edit

  • The International Seismological Centre has a 16957719 bibliography and/or authoritative data for this event.

1900, narciso, earthquake, 1900, venezuelan, earthquake, also, known, narciso, earthquake, español, 1900, terremoto, narciso, occurred, october, between, local, time, this, earthquake, epicenter, miranda, state, near, venezuelan, capital, caracas, cariaco, bas. The 1900 Venezuelan earthquake also known as the San Narciso earthquake Espanol 1900 terremoto de San Narciso occurred on October 28 at between 4 30 and 4 45 am local time This earthquake had an epicenter off Miranda State or near the Venezuelan capital Caracas in the Cariaco Basin It had an estimated moment magnitude of 7 6 7 7 and a surface wave magnitude of 7 7 8 4 It had a maximum Mercalli intensity assigned VIII X causing landslides and liquefaction events Many buildings were severely damaged or collapsed during the earthquake It is thought to be the last great earthquake of the 19th century and the largest instrumentally recorded in the republic having been felt throughout 6 1900 Venezuelan earthquakeCaracasUTC time1900 10 29 09 11 00ISC event16957719USGS ANSSn aLocal dateOctober 29 1900 1900 10 29 Local time04 30 04 45 VETMagnitude7 6 7 7 Mw 1 7 7 8 4 MsDepth15 km 9 3 mi Epicenter11 00 N 66 00 W 11 0 N 66 0 W 11 0 66 0TypeStrike slipMax intensityMMI VIII Severe MMI X Extreme 2 IX ESI 2007 Tsunami5 meters 3 Casualties140 dead 4 50 injured 5 Contents 1 Earthquake 1 1 Magnitude 1 2 Aftershocks 2 Impact 2 1 Effects on landscape and hydrological features 3 Tsunami 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarthquake editThe earthquake was associated with strike slip faulting along either the La Tortuga or San Sebastian faults These two faults are thought to be striking east west off the northern Venezuelan coast A recent study in 2015 concluded that the San Sebastian Fault was the structure responsible for this earthquake The San Sebastian Fault is submarine for most of its length Its onshore trace is parallel to the southern flanks of the Venezuelan Coastal Range Older studies including one in 1984 assigned the San Sebastian Fault as the source after reassessing the earthquake intensity data Audemard in 2002 used the idea of a seismic gap around the region where the earthquake struck The rupture extent caused by the 1900 earthquake is located between that of the 1812 and 1853 earthquakes Ocean bottom surveys found young seafloor deformation and fault scarps which are evidence of the 1900 rupture A rupture length of 220 km for an Mw 7 6 and 270 km for a Mw 7 7 with an average slip depth at 15 km has been suggested 7 Magnitude edit This earthquake is larger than the magnitude 7 5 1812 Caracas earthquake but was far less destructive With a magnitude of 7 7 on the surface wave and moment magnitude scales it is the largest instrumentally recorded earthquake in Venezuela 7 The National Geophysical Data Center catalog lists this earthquake as having a surface wave magnitude of 8 4 while a 1983 catalog placed that figure at 7 7 2 8 Charles Francis Richter also assigned the earthquake at Ms 8 4 in his 1958 book Elementary seismology 9 10 In a 1992 catalog and 2020 study this event was assigned Mw 7 6 11 Aftershocks edit More than 250 aftershocks were recorded in the months following the main event The aftershocks were disruptive to the local population An aftershock is claimed to have woken then President of Venezuela Cipriano Castro in the middle of the night Frightened by the tremors he leaped off one of the windows of the Yellow House and suffered a broken ankle 12 Impact editWith an epicenter in the Caribbean Sea the earthquake badly affected the north central Venezuelan coast In the central region the earthquake resulted in shaking as high as IX on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale covering a 3 560 km2 region around the epicenter The seaside cities of Macuto Guarenas and Guatire were the most severely affected by the earthquake The Los Roques archipelago in the Caribbean Sea suffered heavy impact reportedly having the highest number of victims Twenty five people were killed in Guarenas 2 Large landslides and liquefactions took place in Anzoategui Aragua Carabobo Distrito Capital Miranda and Vargas The heavily populated localities that were affected include Barcelona Onoto and Carenero Some slight damage was reported in San Antonio de Los Altos Paparo Panaquire Guarenas Capaya La Tortuga Island Los Roques archipelago Guigue San Diego Clarines Puerto Cabello and Caucagua 13 Iglesia de San Francisco a church in Caracas was severely damaged Another church in Naiguata was completely destroyed In Macuto landslides buried or destroyed railway lines serving the cities Caracas and La Guaira Guatire saw 237 homes a parish church government house and court offices damaged or collapsed 12 In Guarenas some 72 homes toppled 14 The total death toll from the earthquake is estimated to be over 140 4 At least 50 people were injured Effects on landscape and hydrological features edit At a seaside port in Barcelona named El Rincon built on alluvium deposits from the Neveri River many large cracks opened in the ground Some cracks were longer than 300 meters A 400 m2 area of alluvium in the city subsided significantly due to lateral spreading as a result of ground failure Field observations also noted that an opening of the Neveri River was narrowed by more than two meters while its water level rose The water level in a number of saline wells rose substantially by several meters and began sloshing violently 13 Along the Unare River in Anzoategui portions of its bank slumped into the water Large and deep fissures opened ejecting mud and water Seiches formed along the river causing water to breach the channel by seven meters A man was caught in the waves when he was taking a bath but managed to escape 13 In Carenero Miranda the ground sprouted black water that smelled of sulfur Liquefaction caused several homes and other buildings to sink partially 13 Hot springs located near San Diego Anzoategui dired up some time after the earthquake 13 Residents living around Lake Tacarigua also described violent seiches in the lake as well as loud noises compared to that of a sea They added that large flames and fire shot out of the ground near the lake shores 13 A 100 meter wide landslide buried and sealed off a section of the Caracas La Guaira highway between Guaracarumbo and Ojo de Agua 13 Tsunami editA tsunami flooded the low lying near shore zones of northern Venezuela Waves swept into the Los Roques archipelago and north central Venezuelan coasts It manifested in the form of tidal bores at the mouth of the Neveri River which resulted in the rise in water level The tsunami is estimated to be 1 meter high 13 Witnesses at the coast at the mouth of the Guapo River in Puerto Tuy Miranda reported seeing large waves up to 10 meters high although this claim is disputed Because the earthquake struck in complete darkness before sunrise it is unlikely the eyewitnesses could have a clear view of the wave In addition it is nearly impossible for them to survive being struck by the 10 meter tsunami The small village of Paparo was partially submerged by the waves A better estimate of the maximum tsunami wave height is 5 meters at Barlovento 3 The tsunami may have been generated by a submarine landslide or significant vertical slip mechanism associated with faulting Legacy editThe earthquake of 1900 was a catalyst in expanding research in seismology in Venezuela due to its size and being one of the last great historical earthquakes at the time The first seismic instruments were brought into the country in the aftermath of the earthquake and installed at the Cagigal Observatory in November 1900 to early 1901 12 15 See also editList of earthquakes in 1900 List of earthquakes in VenezuelaReferences edit Vasquez R Guzman A L Rodriguez J A Colon S Audemard F Cabas Mauricio 2020 Magnitude estimation of the 1900 earthquake in Venezuela based on its coseismic effects IOP Conference Series Materials Science and Engineering 872 1 012034 Bibcode 2020MS amp E 872a2034V doi 10 1088 1757 899X 872 1 012034 hdl 11323 6540 ISSN 1757 899X S2CID 222118329 Retrieved 12 June 2021 a b c Significant Earthquake Information NCEI WDS Global Significant Earthquake Database NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information Retrieved August 2 2022 a b Franck Albert Audemard M Alejandra F Leal Guzman 2017 Reliability of first hand accounts on the study of historical tsunamis in northeastern Venezuela southeastern Caribbean Sea Annals of Geophysics 60 6 doi 10 4401 ag 7437 Retrieved 13 June 2021 a b Ferrer D Cluff L 1969 Caracas Venezuela earthquake of July 29 1967 PDF Soil Engineering and Engineering Geology Observations Proceedings of the 4th world conference on earthquake engineering Santiago Chile Retrieved 13 June 2021 Jose Grases Arnaldo Gutierrez Rafael Salas J LA INGENIERIA SISMO RESISTENTE PDF p 3 Retrieved 19 November 2017 Tragedia de San Narciso Terremoto de Caracas ocurrido en el ano de 1900 in Spanish Radiorescate 14 February 2019 Retrieved 12 June 2021 a b Colon S Audemard F A Beck C Avila J Padron C De Batist M Paolini M Leal A F Van Welden A 2015 The 1900 Mw 7 6 earthquake offshore north central Venezuela Is La Tortuga or San Sebastian the source fault Marine and Petroleum Geology 67 Elsevier BV 498 511 Bibcode 2015MarPG 67 498C doi 10 1016 j marpetgeo 2015 06 005 ISSN 0264 8172 K Abe S Noguchi 1983 Revision of magnitudes of large shallow earthquakes 1897 1912 Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 33 1 1 11 Bibcode 1983PEPI 33 1A doi 10 1016 0031 9201 83 90002 X Retrieved 12 June 2021 Charles Francis Richter 1958 Elementary seismology 1 ed WH Freeman amp Co p 768 Suarez Gerardo Nabelek John 10 October 1990 The 1967 Caracas Earthquake Fault geometry direction of rupture propagation and seismotectonic implications Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth 95 B11 17459 17474 Bibcode 1990JGR 9517459S doi 10 1029 JB095iB11p17459 J F Pacheco L R Sykes 1992 Seismic moment catalog of large shallow earthquakes 1900 to 1989 Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 82 3 1306 1349 Bibcode 1992BuSSA 82 1306P doi 10 1785 BSSA0820031306 S2CID 132108756 Retrieved 12 June 2021 a b c El movimiento telurico tuvo una magnitud de 8 0 www funvisis gob ve in Spanish Venezuelan Foundation for Seismological Research Retrieved 12 June 2021 a b c d e f g h Sirel Colon Alejandra Leal Franck Audemard Raquel Vasquez Jose Antonio Rodriguez 2019 Analisis macrosismico del sismo MW 7 6 de san narciso del 29 de octubre de 1900 aplicando la escala medio ambiental de intensidad sismica ESI 2007 Macroseismic analysis of the earthquake MW 7 6 in San Narciso of October 29 1900 applying the environmental scale of seismic intensity ESI 2007 Journal of the Faculty of Engineering in Spanish 34 1 ISSN 2443 4477 Retrieved 12 June 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Liendo Daniel 2019 A 119 anos del Sismo de San Narciso el Gobierno Bolivariano promueve una cultura sismica en comunidades y escuelas minci gob ve in Spanish Ministry of Communication and Information Retrieved 12 June 2021 R Altez J Grases 2004 A brief history of a restless vision seismological research in Venezuela Annals of Geophysics 47 2 3 doi 10 4401 ag 3312 Retrieved 13 June 2021 External links editThe International Seismological Centre has a 16957719 bibliography and or authoritative data for this event Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1900 San Narciso earthquake amp oldid 1187275047, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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