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September 2007 Sumatra earthquakes

The September 2007 Sumatra earthquakes were a series of megathrust earthquakes that struck the Sunda Trench off the coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, with three of magnitude 7 or greater. A series of tsunami bulletins was issued for the area. The most powerful of the series had a magnitude of 8.4, which makes it in the top 20 of the largest earthquakes ever recorded on a seismograph.

September 2007 Sumatra earthquakes
UTC time 
 A: 2007-09-12 11:10:26
 B: 2007-09-12 23:49:03
ISC event 
 A: 13203322
 B: 13203366
USGS-ANSS 
 A: ComCat
 B: ComCat
Local date12 September 2007 (2007-09-12)
13 September 2007 (2007-09-13)
Local time 
 A: 18:10
 B: 06:49
Magnitude 
 A: 8.4 Mw
 B: 7.9 Mw
Depth34.0 kilometres (21.1 mi)
Epicenter4°24′25″S 101°30′07″E / 4.407°S 101.502°E / -4.407; 101.502
2°34′19″S 100°45′40″E / 2.572°S 100.761°E / -2.572; 100.761
Areas affectedIndonesia
Singapore
Malaysia
Thailand
Max. intensityMMI VI (Strong)
Tsunamiyes
Casualties25 dead, 161 injured[1]

Timeline edit

The first earthquake occurred at 11:10:26 UTC (18:10 local time) on 12 September 2007, and was an 8.5 Mwearthquake on the moment magnitude scale.[2] It had a focal depth of 34 km, at 4°31′12″S 101°22′26″E / 4.520°S 101.374°E / -4.520; 101.374, about 130 km southwest of Bengkulu on the southwest coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, and some 600 km west-northwest of Indonesia's capital city, Jakarta. It was followed by several earthquakes of magnitude 5 through 6 along the same fault, west of Sumatra.

The second largest earthquake, 7.9 Mw,[2][3] occurred later the same day at 23:49:04 UTC (06:49:04 local time the following day). It was centred about 35 km underground, at 2°37′30″S 100°50′28″E / 2.625°S 100.841°E / -2.625; 100.841, some 185 km (115 mi) south-southeast of Padang, Indonesia and about 205 km northwest of Bengkulu (about 225 km northwest of the magnitude 8.5 earthquake).

After further aftershocks above magnitude 5, a third large earthquake, 7.0 Mw, occurred at 03:35:28 UTC (10:35:28 local time) on 13 September.[4] It was centred about 10 km underground, at 2°07′48″S 99°37′37″E / 2.130°S 99.627°E / -2.130; 99.627, some 165 km south-southwest of Padang and 345 km west-northwest of Bengkulu. It is regarded as an aftershock of the two larger earthquakes.[4]

Aftershocks continued into 13 September and 14 September, with more earthquakes ranging up to magnitude 6.4.[5] Most of the aftershocks have been northwest of the original magnitude 8.4 earthquake. A 6.7 struck Southern Sumatra on Sept 20, 2007.

Tidal buoys[6] positioned in the Indian Ocean and other seismic tools have led scientists to issue a series of tsunami bulletins.[7]

Effects edit

The tremors of the 8.5 Mw  earthquake lasted for several minutes. It caused buildings to sway in Jakarta, and some buildings were reported to have collapsed in the city of Bengkulu, Bengkulu Province, about 100 km (62 mi) from the epicenter. Tremors felt in Jakarta were described as being "violent".[8] It was reported that several high-rise buildings were evacuated.[9] The earthquake also led to a power outage in Bengkulu, which crippled communications.[9] The death toll of the earthquakes is 25 with 161 people injured.[1]

Tremors were felt in neighbouring countries as far away as Southern Thailand.[10][11] In Singapore, which is about 670 km (416.3 mi) from the epicenter, the tremor was felt at around 11:10 UTC (19:10 local time).[12] Most of the Central and Eastern part of Singapore had felt the tremor.[13] In Peninsular Malaysia, tremors were reported after 19:15 local time, including Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya, Johor Bahru, Malacca and Penang. Like Singapore, the tremors were most severe on high-rises, resulting in minor panic and evacuations. No casualties were reported in the country, as of 13 September.[14][15]

Tsunami edit

Sea level readings indicated that a tsunami was generated. A total of 4 tsunami alerts were issued in 24 hours. After the first, and largest, earthquake, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre issued a tsunami alert for much of the Indian Ocean basin. A tsunami approximately 1 metre high was reported at Padang, Indonesia.[16] A 1.5 metre tsunami was observed in Sikakap beach on South Pagai Island.[17] A small tsunami, some 15 cm high, was reported at the Cocos Islands.[18] Sumatra was taken off tsunami alert after two hours. A weak tsunami caused some damage in Serangai, located north of Bengkulu. The tsunami had a flow depth of 3.5 m (11 ft) and maximum run-up of 5 m (16 ft), measured on a cliff top.[19]

Tsunami warnings were also issued in India and other countries around the Indian Ocean soon after the earthquake. The Government of India asked the states of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and the union territories of Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Puducherry to be on high alert.[20] By late 12 September, the tsunami warning was recalled.[21] Similarly, a tsunami alert was issued in Peninsular Malaysia at 20:50 (local time) for the coastal areas of Perlis, Kedah, Perak and Penang; the alert was lifted two hours later. However, Malaysian authorities had detected a 1–3 m (3.3–9.8 ft) high tsunami heading away from the epicenter of the earthquake.[14]

Tectonic summary edit

 

According to the US Geological Survey,[22] the earthquake was caused by thrust faulting on the boundary between the Australian Plate and the Sunda Plate. At the location of the earthquake, offshore of the west coast of Sumatra, the Australia plate moves northeast with respect to the Sunda Plate at a velocity of about 69 mm/year, oblique to the orientation of the plate boundary. The component of plate motion perpendicular to the boundary produces thrust faulting on the offshore plate-boundary.

The magnitude 7.9 earthquake was also a result of thrust faulting on the same plate boundary. It occurred about 225 km northwest of the magnitude 8.5 earthquake, at the northern end of the aftershock zone.[3]

The magnitude 8.5 earthquake was the most powerful earthquake of 2007 to date, more powerful than the two March 2007 Sumatra earthquakes nearby and the 2007 Peru earthquake. It was the second most powerful earthquake since the magnitude 9.3 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, exceeded only by the magnitude 8.6 2005 Nias–Simeulue earthquake. The two largest earthquakes were the fourth and fifth earthquakes with magnitude 7.9 or greater to have occurred on or near the plate boundaries offshore of western Sumatra in 7 years, the others being the magnitude 7.9 earthquake of 4 June 2000; the magnitude 9.3 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake on 26 December 2004; and the magnitude 8.6 Nias–Simeulue earthquake on 28 March 2005.

According to data from the Japanese PALSAR microwave sensor aboard the Daichi(ALOS) satellite, South Pagai Island was uplifted, creating 6 new islands, and exposing previously submerged coral reefs as well as enlarging existing islands.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Stefano Lorito, Fabrizio Romano, Alessio Piatanesi, Enzo Boschi (2008). "Source process of the September 12, 2007, MW 8.4 southern Sumatra earthquake from tsunami tide gauge record inversion". Geophysical Research Letters. 35 (2). Bibcode:2008GeoRL..35.2310L. doi:10.1029/2007GL032661.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b ISC (2022), ISC-GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1904–2018), Version 9.1, International Seismological Centre
  3. ^ a b ANSS. "Sumatra 2007: M 7.9 - Kepulauan Mentawai region, Indonesia". Comprehensive Catalog. U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  4. ^ a b ANSS. "Sumatra 2007: M 7.0 - Kepulauan Mentawai region, Indonesia". Comprehensive Catalog. U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  5. ^ Latest Quakes +5.0M October 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine USGS
  6. ^ DART Buoy Station 23401 - 600 NM West-Northwest of Phuket, Thailand
  7. ^ Message indian.2007.09.13.002807 Pacific Tsunami Warning Center, NWS, NWS PTWC
  8. ^ Eyewitnesses: Sumatra earthquake, BBC News
  9. ^ a b Powerful quake shakes Indonesia, BBC News
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-08-20. Retrieved 2007-09-12.
  11. ^ Event 2007hear: View Map September 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-08-20. Retrieved 2007-09-12.
  13. ^ Map October 4, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ a b . Sun2Surf. 2007-09-13. Archived from the original on 2010-03-05. Retrieved 2007-09-13.
  15. ^ . The Star. 2007-09-13. Archived from the original on 2008-04-24. Retrieved 2007-09-13.
  16. ^ , The Jakarta Post
  17. ^ , Agence France-Presse via ABS-CBN Corporation. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  18. ^ , Herald Sun
  19. ^ National Geophysical Data Center / World Data Service (NGDC/WDS), Global Historical Tsunami Database (Data Set), NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
  20. ^ , CNN-IBN
  21. ^ . The Hindu
  22. ^ ANSS. "Sumatra 2007: M 8.4 - southern Sumatra, Indonesia". Comprehensive Catalog. U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  23. ^ (in Japanese) Southern Sumatra Earthquake in 2007, coastal change, GSI 2007-11-15 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

4°26′17″S 101°22′01″E / 4.438°S 101.367°E / -4.438; 101.367

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Geological Survey.

september, 2007, sumatra, earthquakes, were, series, megathrust, earthquakes, that, struck, sunda, trench, coast, sumatra, indonesia, with, three, magnitude, greater, series, tsunami, bulletins, issued, area, most, powerful, series, magnitude, which, makes, la. The September 2007 Sumatra earthquakes were a series of megathrust earthquakes that struck the Sunda Trench off the coast of Sumatra Indonesia with three of magnitude 7 or greater A series of tsunami bulletins was issued for the area The most powerful of the series had a magnitude of 8 4 which makes it in the top 20 of the largest earthquakes ever recorded on a seismograph September 2007 Sumatra earthquakesShow map of SumatraShow map of IndonesiaUTC time A 2007 09 12 11 10 26 B 2007 09 12 23 49 03ISC event A 13203322 B 13203366USGS ANSS A ComCat B ComCatLocal date12 September 2007 2007 09 12 13 September 2007 2007 09 13 Local time A 18 10 B 06 49Magnitude A 8 4 Mw B 7 9 Mw Depth34 0 kilometres 21 1 mi Epicenter4 24 25 S 101 30 07 E 4 407 S 101 502 E 4 407 101 502 2 34 19 S 100 45 40 E 2 572 S 100 761 E 2 572 100 761Areas affectedIndonesiaSingaporeMalaysiaThailandMax intensityMMI VI Strong TsunamiyesCasualties25 dead 161 injured 1 Contents 1 Timeline 2 Effects 3 Tsunami 4 Tectonic summary 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTimeline editThe first earthquake occurred at 11 10 26 UTC 18 10 local time on 12 September 2007 and was an 8 5 Mw earthquake on the moment magnitude scale 2 It had a focal depth of 34 km at 4 31 12 S 101 22 26 E 4 520 S 101 374 E 4 520 101 374 about 130 km southwest of Bengkulu on the southwest coast of Sumatra Indonesia and some 600 km west northwest of Indonesia s capital city Jakarta It was followed by several earthquakes of magnitude 5 through 6 along the same fault west of Sumatra The second largest earthquake 7 9 Mw 2 3 occurred later the same day at 23 49 04 UTC 06 49 04 local time the following day It was centred about 35 km underground at 2 37 30 S 100 50 28 E 2 625 S 100 841 E 2 625 100 841 some 185 km 115 mi south southeast of Padang Indonesia and about 205 km northwest of Bengkulu about 225 km northwest of the magnitude 8 5 earthquake After further aftershocks above magnitude 5 a third large earthquake 7 0 Mw occurred at 03 35 28 UTC 10 35 28 local time on 13 September 4 It was centred about 10 km underground at 2 07 48 S 99 37 37 E 2 130 S 99 627 E 2 130 99 627 some 165 km south southwest of Padang and 345 km west northwest of Bengkulu It is regarded as an aftershock of the two larger earthquakes 4 Aftershocks continued into 13 September and 14 September with more earthquakes ranging up to magnitude 6 4 5 Most of the aftershocks have been northwest of the original magnitude 8 4 earthquake A 6 7 struck Southern Sumatra on Sept 20 2007 Tidal buoys 6 positioned in the Indian Ocean and other seismic tools have led scientists to issue a series of tsunami bulletins 7 Effects editThe tremors of the 8 5 Mw earthquake lasted for several minutes It caused buildings to sway in Jakarta and some buildings were reported to have collapsed in the city of Bengkulu Bengkulu Province about 100 km 62 mi from the epicenter Tremors felt in Jakarta were described as being violent 8 It was reported that several high rise buildings were evacuated 9 The earthquake also led to a power outage in Bengkulu which crippled communications 9 The death toll of the earthquakes is 25 with 161 people injured 1 Tremors were felt in neighbouring countries as far away as Southern Thailand 10 11 In Singapore which is about 670 km 416 3 mi from the epicenter the tremor was felt at around 11 10 UTC 19 10 local time 12 Most of the Central and Eastern part of Singapore had felt the tremor 13 In Peninsular Malaysia tremors were reported after 19 15 local time including Kuala Lumpur Putrajaya Johor Bahru Malacca and Penang Like Singapore the tremors were most severe on high rises resulting in minor panic and evacuations No casualties were reported in the country as of 13 September 14 15 Tsunami editSea level readings indicated that a tsunami was generated A total of 4 tsunami alerts were issued in 24 hours After the first and largest earthquake the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre issued a tsunami alert for much of the Indian Ocean basin A tsunami approximately 1 metre high was reported at Padang Indonesia 16 A 1 5 metre tsunami was observed in Sikakap beach on South Pagai Island 17 A small tsunami some 15 cm high was reported at the Cocos Islands 18 Sumatra was taken off tsunami alert after two hours A weak tsunami caused some damage in Serangai located north of Bengkulu The tsunami had a flow depth of 3 5 m 11 ft and maximum run up of 5 m 16 ft measured on a cliff top 19 Tsunami warnings were also issued in India and other countries around the Indian Ocean soon after the earthquake The Government of India asked the states of Tamil Nadu Kerala Andhra Pradesh and the union territories of Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Puducherry to be on high alert 20 By late 12 September the tsunami warning was recalled 21 Similarly a tsunami alert was issued in Peninsular Malaysia at 20 50 local time for the coastal areas of Perlis Kedah Perak and Penang the alert was lifted two hours later However Malaysian authorities had detected a 1 3 m 3 3 9 8 ft high tsunami heading away from the epicenter of the earthquake 14 Tectonic summary edit nbsp According to the US Geological Survey 22 the earthquake was caused by thrust faulting on the boundary between the Australian Plate and the Sunda Plate At the location of the earthquake offshore of the west coast of Sumatra the Australia plate moves northeast with respect to the Sunda Plate at a velocity of about 69 mm year oblique to the orientation of the plate boundary The component of plate motion perpendicular to the boundary produces thrust faulting on the offshore plate boundary The magnitude 7 9 earthquake was also a result of thrust faulting on the same plate boundary It occurred about 225 km northwest of the magnitude 8 5 earthquake at the northern end of the aftershock zone 3 The magnitude 8 5 earthquake was the most powerful earthquake of 2007 to date more powerful than the two March 2007 Sumatra earthquakes nearby and the 2007 Peru earthquake It was the second most powerful earthquake since the magnitude 9 3 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake exceeded only by the magnitude 8 6 2005 Nias Simeulue earthquake The two largest earthquakes were the fourth and fifth earthquakes with magnitude 7 9 or greater to have occurred on or near the plate boundaries offshore of western Sumatra in 7 years the others being the magnitude 7 9 earthquake of 4 June 2000 the magnitude 9 3 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake on 26 December 2004 and the magnitude 8 6 Nias Simeulue earthquake on 28 March 2005 According to data from the Japanese PALSAR microwave sensor aboard the Daichi ALOS satellite South Pagai Island was uplifted creating 6 new islands and exposing previously submerged coral reefs as well as enlarging existing islands 23 See also edit nbsp Wikinews has related news Massive earthquake strikes Indonesia on September 12 nbsp Indonesia portal nbsp Earth sciences portal List of earthquakes in 2007 List of earthquakes in Indonesia March 2007 Sumatra earthquakesReferences edit a b Stefano Lorito Fabrizio Romano Alessio Piatanesi Enzo Boschi 2008 Source process of the September 12 2007 MW 8 4 southern Sumatra earthquake from tsunami tide gauge record inversion Geophysical Research Letters 35 2 Bibcode 2008GeoRL 35 2310L doi 10 1029 2007GL032661 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b ISC 2022 ISC GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue 1904 2018 Version 9 1 International Seismological Centre a b ANSS Sumatra 2007 M 7 9 Kepulauan Mentawai region Indonesia Comprehensive Catalog U S Geological Survey Retrieved 3 October 2018 a b ANSS Sumatra 2007 M 7 0 Kepulauan Mentawai region Indonesia Comprehensive Catalog U S Geological Survey Retrieved 3 October 2018 Latest Quakes 5 0M Archived October 7 2009 at the Wayback Machine USGS DART Buoy Station 23401 600 NM West Northwest of Phuket Thailand Message indian 2007 09 13 002807 Pacific Tsunami Warning Center NWS NWS PTWC Eyewitnesses Sumatra earthquake BBC News a b Powerful quake shakes Indonesia BBC News Tsunami alert issued after Indonesia quake US centre Archived from the original on 2017 08 20 Retrieved 2007 09 12 Event 2007hear View Map Archived September 15 2007 at the Wayback Machine Singapore buildings sway after strong quake hits Indonesia Archived from the original on 2017 08 20 Retrieved 2007 09 12 Map Archived October 4 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b 8 2 magnitude quake sparks tsunami warnings Sun2Surf 2007 09 13 Archived from the original on 2010 03 05 Retrieved 2007 09 13 Quake felt in Malaysia The Star 2007 09 13 Archived from the original on 2008 04 24 Retrieved 2007 09 13 Powerful earthquake triggers tsunami in western Indonesia The Jakarta Post Six dead dozens injured in Indonesian quakes Agence France Presse via ABS CBN Corporation Retrieved August 24 2022 Tsunami recorded at Cocos Island Herald Sun National Geophysical Data Center World Data Service NGDC WDS Global Historical Tsunami Database Data Set NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information India on tsunami alert after quake near Indonesia CNN IBN Tsunami alert withdrawn The Hindu ANSS Sumatra 2007 M 8 4 southern Sumatra Indonesia Comprehensive Catalog U S Geological Survey Retrieved 3 October 2018 in Japanese Southern Sumatra Earthquake in 2007 coastal change GSI Archived 2007 11 15 at the Wayback MachineExternal links edit4 26 17 S 101 22 01 E 4 438 S 101 367 E 4 438 101 367 USGS Earthquake Center 8 5 tracking report USGS Earthquake Center 7 9 tracking report Tsunami Information Statement 1 NOAA NWS West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center Tsunami bulletin number 003 Pacific Tsunami Warning Center NOAA NWS nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Geological Survey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title September 2007 Sumatra earthquakes amp oldid 1220532870, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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