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1976 Tangshan earthquake

The 1976 Tangshan earthquake (Chinese: 唐山大地震; pinyin: Tángshān dà dìzhèn; lit. 'Great Tangshan earthquake[b]') was a Mw 7.6 earthquake that hit the region around Tangshan, Hebei, China, at 3:42 a.m. on 28 July 1976. The maximum intensity of the earthquake was XI (Extreme) on the Mercalli scale. In minutes, 85 percent of the buildings in Tangshan collapsed or were rendered unusable, all services failed, and most of the highway and railway bridges collapsed or were seriously damaged.[6] The official report claimed 242,769 deaths and 164,851 serious injuries in Tangshan, but when taken into account the missing, the injured who later died and the deaths in nearby Beijing and Tianjin, scholars accepted at least 300,000 died,[7][8] making it one of the worst disasters in China by death toll.

1976 Tangshan earthquake
唐山大地震
UTC timeDoublet earthquake:    
 A: 1976-07-27 19:42:55
 B: 1976-07-28 10:45:36
ISC event 
 A: 711732
 B: 711773
USGS-ANSS 
 A: ComCat
 B: ComCat
Local date28 July 1976
Local timePeking time:
 A: 03:43
 B: 18:45
Magnitude 
 A: 7.6 Mw; 7.6 Ms[1]
 B: 7.0 Mw; 7.4 Ms[2]
DepthA: 12.2 km[1]
B: 16.7 km[2]
Epicenter39°38′N 118°06′E / 39.63°N 118.10°E / 39.63; 118.10 39°43′N 118°26′E / 39.72°N 118.44°E / 39.72; 118.44
Max. intensityXI (Extreme)
Casualties242,419[3][a] to 655,000[4][5]

The earthquakes edit

The Tangshan earthquake was composed of two main shocks. The first struck at 3:42:56 in the morning (local time), approximately 12 km under the southern part of Tangshan.[9] The magnitude was initially estimated at 8.1, subsequently recalculated to be 7.6 on the standard Mw scale.[1] However, that scale measures only the total energy released by an earthquake, and earthquakes vary in how much of that energy is converted to seismic shaking. The Tangshan quake, being relatively shallow, converted much of its energy to surface shaking, and on the Ms (surface magnitude) scale it also measured 7.6. (7.8 on the Chinese surface magnitude scale.[10]) This "occurred on a near vertical right-lateral strike-slip fault, striking N40°E",[11] the block on the southeast side sliding about three meters to the southwest.[12] This resulted from tectonic compression on a nearly west–east axis.[13] Surface rupturing occurred in five en echelon segments extending eight kilometers through the center of Tangshan.[14]

The second main shock, with a magnitude 7.0 Mw , or 7.4 Ms , struck that afternoon at 18:45 near Luanxian, about 70 km to the east-northeast ("B" on the intensity map in the next section), just south of the northeastern end of the Tangshan fault.[15] This occurred in a zone of north-northwest striking conjugate faults that cut across the north end of the Tangshan fault. The left-lateral motion here, along with the right-lateral motion on the Tangshan fault, suggests that as the crustal blocks to the west and east are compressed together the block between these two earthquakes is being squeezed out to the south.

A long sequence of aftershocks followed, with twelve of magnitude 6 or greater.[16] The first of these struck just three and a half hours after the initial shock, at 7:17, at the southern end of Tangshan fault, near Ninghe ("C" on the map in the section below),[17] with a magnitude of 6.2 Ms . Another significant aftershock (Ms 6.9) occurred in November near Ninghe. Most aftershocks occurred between these end points, in a zone 140 km long and about 50 km wide.[18] Many buildings were further damaged by the aftershocks.[19]

The aftershock zone remains seismically active in the twenty-first century. Earthquakes measuring 4.5 Ms  to 4.7 Ms  occurred in 2012, 2016 and 2019. On 12 July 2020, a 5.1 Ms  strike-slip earthquake struck the northern part of the Tangshan Fault. It produced its own sequence of aftershocks that ended on 17 July 2020.[20] The earthquake only caused minor damage to buildings in Tangshan.[21] Its occurrence stirred a debate among scientists into whether the recent earthquakes are aftershocks of the 1976 event or are background seismicity.[22]

Damage edit

Extent of significant shaking
 
Approximate extent of different intensities of shaking (isoseismals). Heaviest damage was within the dark brown line (intensity VII and greater). Diamonds locate the two principal shocks (A and B), and the area of several M > 6 aftershocks near Ninghe (C).

The damage done by an earthquake depends primarily on two factors. First, the intensity of shaking, which depends mainly on the magnitude of the earthquake rupture, the distance from the epicenter, and the nature of the local soil and topography, with soft soils (e.g., sediments and fill) more likely to amplify the intensity and duration of the shaking.[23] Second, the design and construction of the structures being shaken, with houses built of adobe or stone, wooden houses without a well-built frame, and unreinforced masonry construction being especially vulnerable.[24] The seismic risk had been greatly underestimated and almost all buildings and structures were designed and built without seismic considerations.[19] As a result, Tangshan was "mainly a city of unreinforced brick buildings",[9] sitting right on top of a major fault line.

The power (magnitude) of the Tangshan earthquake is indicated by the extent of where it was felt: up to 1,100 km (680 mi) away, across most of northeastern China, and even in Mongolia and Korea.[25] In and around Beijing, 140 km (87 mi) from the epicenter, the shaking reached an intensity of VI on the Chinese intensity scale (similar to the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale), with nearly 10% of all buildings damaged,[26] and at least 50 fatalities.

The economic loss totaled to 10 billion yuan.[27]

Intensity XI and X zone edit

The rupture occurred under the southern part of the city, and propagated northeastward on a fault that runs through the middle of the city. The maximum intensity was "XI" (eleven) on the 12-degree Chinese scale. Nearly every building and structure in the city collapsed, wholly or partially, infrastructure was severely damaged, and essential services such as electric power, water supply, and communications were entirely knocked out. This area of maximum damage – the meizoseismal area – was approximately 10.5 kilometres (6.5 mi) long and from 3.5 to 5.5 km wide, centered roughly along the railway.[28]

The area of intensity X shaking – where only new, one-story brick buildings were merely "damaged or slightly damaged", the rest being severely damaged or worse – was 36 km long and 15 km across.[29] In this "high intensity" zone (intensity X and XI, within the red contour on the map) 20 highway bridges and five railway bridges cross the Douhe River in Tangshan; only six survived with only minor damage.[30]

Intensity IX and VIII zone edit

Shaking of intensity IX (or greater) occurred in a zone roughly 78 km (48 mi) long and 42 km (26 mi) (about 1800 km2, inner orange contour on the map), and also around the aftershocks at Luanxian and Ninghe. In this zone most buildings classified as Class III (well-built buildings of wood, masonry, or reinforced concrete[31]) survived,[32] but many Class II buildings (typically old wood-frame buildings lacking a well-built frame, and quite common outside of the cities) were destroyed, while a majority of Class I buildings (built of adobe or stone) were destroyed.

Further out (to the outer orange contour), and around the city of Tianjin and a few isolated patches, intensity VIII shaking mostly affected Class I buildings (more than half destroyed), bridges, and tall brick chimneys. Railway track was also subject to bending or displacement, depending on soil conditions.[29]

Intensity VII zone edit

The zone of intensity VII shaking – inside the dark brown contour – marks the extent of moderate damage, where many Class I structures (of weak design or construction) were damaged but only "few"—between 10% and 30%—were destroyed, and only a "few" Class two buildings damaged. This ellipsoid zone extended about 75 km north and south of Tangshan and 120 km east and west, from about 25 km short of Beijing to short of Qinhuangdao City (which had anomalously higher shaking), and from the Sea of Bohai in the south and southwest to just north of Zunhua. The north–south shortening of this zone is attributed to buttressing by the bedrock of the Yanshin mountains.

Significant damage occurred beyond this in the VI zone, but (like in Beijing) affected less than 10% of the buildings, or occurred in small localized areas.[33]

Coal mines edit

Mining coal is Tangshan's principal industry, and when the quake struck around 10,000 miners were underground. For the most part the mine roadways (tunnels) were not seriously damaged, but with the loss of electrical power there was no illumination (aside from headlamps), no ventilation, and no working lifts.[34] It is reported that most miners escaped within hours, but that some did not reach the surface until two weeks later.[35]

Most of the damage to the vertical shafts occurred within the first 50 meters, where they pass through the water-bearing alluvium. In many cases the concrete liner built to keep out the water cracked (particularly where not built properly), allowing a much greater inflow of water. Coupled with damage to the underground drainage system and lack of power to drive the pumps, many of the various mines flooded.[36]

Some electrical power to the mines was restored in three days, and some coal production resumed within ten days.[37] However, de-watering, overhauling of flooded electrical equipment, and rebuilding of surface buildings and structures continued for a year and a half; the pre-earthquake level of production was not reached until the end of 1977.[37]

Railways edit

The Beijing–Shanhaiguan Railway (built in 1887) is a double-track Class I trunk line that runs from Beijing southeast to Tianjin and Tanggu, then turns northeast to cross the Yongdingxin River and its estuary to run to Ninghe and then Tangshan. From Tangshan it continues northeast and then east to Chengli, and then to Qinhuangdao and Shanhaiguan. This is the principal connection of Beijing, Tianjin, and Tangshan to the seaports, and to Northeast China. The Tongxian to Tuozitou (within modern-day Luan County) Railway (built in 1976) is a single-track Class I trunk line that runs east from the eastern outskirts of Beijing to where it meets the Beijing to Shanhaiguan line northeast of Tangshan (near the epicenter of the M 7.1 quake).[38] All of this was built "with no consideration for earthquake resistant design",[39] although some "earthquake resistance measures" for large and medium bridges were applied following the 1975 Haicheng earthquake.

These vital arteries (and other railways and branch lines) were seriously damaged by the earthquakes, mainly in the areas of intensity IX or greater shaking.[40] (This includes a large area around Tangshan quake, and areas around Ninghe and Luanxian following the M 6.9 and M 7.4 aftershocks.) At the time of the main quake there were 28 freight trains and seven passenger trains traveling on the Beijing–Shanhaiguan line in the affected area; seven freight trains and two passenger trains derailed due to derangement of the rails,[41] mostly south of Tangshan[42] where the line was built on loose alluvium, diluvium, and occasional stretches of loose sand.[39] In many of these cases – and also similar cases northeast of Tangshan, and on the Tongxian–Tuozitou line east of Fengrun – the railway embankment slumped due to weak soils. In other cases the embankment held, but transverse compression of the rails caused them to buckle.[43]

Railway operations were further impaired by the loss of communications (including signalling) and water supply (for the steam locomotives), in both cases due mainly to collapse of buildings and loss of electrical power.[44] However, the most serious damage, taking the most manpower and longest time to repair, was that involving bridges.[45] Most difficult was where soft or liquefied soil allowed the bank to slide into the river, shifting the abutments. A more frequent problem was where an approach embankment subsided, typically leaving the rails suspended from the abutment. There were numerous cases where concrete piers and abutments were damaged due to inadequate design and construction; bridges that were strengthened following the Haicheng earthquake survived with only slight damage.[46]

It was observed that at intensity VII and above damage to the roadbed was correlated mainly with loose soil and a high water table. Conversely, bridges and rails in Tangshan City, built on dense soil with a deep water table, were largely undamaged even though subject to intensity XI shaking.[47]

Over forty-two thousand people were mobilized to quickly effect emergency repair of the railways.[48] The Tongxian-Tuozitou line was opened for traffic on 3 August, single track of the Beijing-Shanhaiguan line opened on 7 August, and both tracks on 10 August, albeit at restricted speeds over temporary bridges and at other places where repairs were not yet complete.[39]

Death toll edit

 
A Tangshan earthquake memorial in Tianjin

The official report claimed 242,769 deaths and 164,851 serious injuries in Tangshan, but when taken into account the "missing", the injured who later died and the deaths in nearby Beijing and Tianjin, scholars accepted at least 300,000 died,[7][8] making it the deadliest earthquake in China and among the top disasters in China by death toll. Unofficial estimates of the death toll varied widely, and generally lack a clear authoritative basis.

Early reports edit

One of the earliest reports outside of China came on 28 July 1976 from the International Tsunami Information Center, reporting that a "violent" earthquake, initially estimated at magnitude 8.1, had struck "in the vicinity of Peking" (Beijing). Center Director Dr. George Pararas-Carayannis was reported as saying that "if the quake hit in a populated area reports of considerable damage could be expected."[49]

News reports the next day located the quake "about 100 miles (160 km) southeast of Peking and 63 miles (101 km) northeast of Tientsen" (Tianjin); i.e., "almost precisely in Tangshan".[50] The Chinese Communist party's Central Committee also broadcast a statement that the quake "caused great losses to people's life and property". One of the first reports from Tangshan said "nearly every building in the city ... was flattened."[51] There were several reports of 50 people killed in Beijing, a 100 miles (160 km) from the epicenter.

According to author Stephen Spignesi, a "couple of days" after the quake Dr. Pararas-Carayannis gave United Press International (UPI) an estimate of 700,000 to 750,000 deaths, based on a similar sized earthquake in Shaanxi province in 1556 that caused 830,000 deaths.[52] Pararas-Carayannis' current web page[53] says only that "it was fairly accurately estimated that there were at least 655,000 people dead," without mentioning by whom or on what basis this estimate was made.

In August the Nationalist Chinese government in Taiwan announced that, according to their agents in China, the death toll was over 100,000, with about 900,000 injured. They also reported that "almost all buildings in Tangshan were leveled", and 80 percent of homes and buildings in Tianjin "suffered damage to some extent".[54]

The following January (1977) the Nationalists released a document they said had been presented at an emergency conference on relief work the previous August by the Hebei Provincial Committee of the party and the Hebei Revolutionary Committee.[55] According to this document: "in such seriously stricken areas as Tangshan municipality, and Fengnan and Feng-yun, there were 655,237 persons dead. Some 79,000 persons were seriously injured, and some 700,000 persons suffered various degrees of injuries." Though these figures have been widely cited, it does not appear there has ever been inquiry into how they were derived, of whether they were an initial estimate (made in the first few days following the quake), or had a more solid basis.[citation needed]

In the following June it was reported[56] that the Chinese authorities had briefed seismologist Cinna Lomnitz about Tangshan. It was noted that though no figures were provided, they did not deny any published estimates.

Official figures edit

 
Section 4C of the Tangshan Earthquake Memorial Wall

A 1988 book by several members of the Chinese State Seismological Bureau states that 242,419 people died in the quake,[57] which reflects the official figure reported by the state-run Xinhua News Agency.[58] A webpage of the Chinese Earthquake Administration dated 2009[59] also attributes "242,769 deaths and 164,851 serious injuries" to the Tangshan quake based on an early 1982 study.[60]

There are various reports that the "official death toll was later given by the Chinese government as 275,000",[61] without specifying a source.

As of 2017, the Tangshan Earthquake Memorial Wall contained the names of 246,465 victims, who were registered by relatives.[58]

Political aspects edit

The remarkably low death toll of the Haicheng earthquake the previous year – initially said to be fewer than 300,[62] much later estimated at a still very modest 2,041[63] – had been credited to measures taken in response to an accurate and timely prediction. This was touted as demonstrating the validity of the Chinese methods of earthquake prediction (including inspiration from "Mao Zedong Thought"[64]) and "the superiority of our country's socialist system!"[65]

With China in the midst of the Cultural Revolution,[66] "belief in earthquake prediction was made an element of ideological orthodoxy that distinguished the true party liners from right wing deviationists", and it was everyone's duty to criticize those who doubted the feasibility of earthquake prediction.[67]

As a backdrop to this, and of deep concern to the Chinese Communist Party,[68] was a collectively recognized but unvoiced awareness[69] that in traditional Chinese belief, natural disasters are considered disruptions in the natural order of "heaven" (Tian) and may signify the loss of legitimacy (the "mandate of heaven") of the current government.[70] This view was underlined by a magnitude 6.7 earthquake in southwestern China just three weeks later.[71] On the other hand, an ongoing mass education campaign before the quake showed that the government was aware and concerned, and the prompt and massive response following the quake demonstrated the government's competence to alleviate suffering and restore normal production, drawing on resources from across the nation.[72] This was contrasted with the hardships faced by disaster victims (especially the poor) under previous regimes, where assistance was lacking.[73]

Mao Zedong was already ailing at the time of the earthquake. In the event, he died only six weeks later on September 9, 1976, ushering the downfall of the Gang of Four and bringing the Cultural Revolution to an end.[74]

Geology edit

 
Tectonic elements surrounding the North China Craton on which Tangshan lies.

Tangshan lies at the northern edge of the Beijing-Tianjin-Tangshan Plain, an alluvial plain that stretches from Beijing to the Sea of Bohai.[75] This plain – the northeastern corner of the great North China Plain – is where sediments eroded from the Yanshan mountains to the north have filled in the ancient Sea of Bohai, with Tangshan near where the shore was about 4,000 years ago.[76] To the south these sediments have formed a layer of weak soils as much as three kilometers thick. At Tangshan and northward these sediments are thinner where the underlying strata crops out to form isolated hills.[77] This underlying strata is a thick (typically 10 km) layer of mainly sedimentary strata such as limestone and sandstone, with large deposits of coal.[78] Tangshan is located particularly over a northeast oriented syncline, a fold in the sedimentary strata that has brought massive deposits of coal close enough to the surface to be mined. In this area the overlying alluvium varies in thickness from several meters to around 600 m (2,000 ft).[34]

Underlying all this is the ancient bedrock of different kinds of metamorphic rock (such as schist, gneiss, quartzite, granulite, etc.) that form the Eastern Block of the North China Craton.[78] This craton (see figure) was formed approximately two billion years ago[79] by the collision of two major crustal blocks that left a belt of uplifted mountains – the Central (China) Orogenic Belt (COB) – that crosses China approximately southwest to northeast, passing just west and north of Beijing.[80] Just north of Zunhua another orogenic belt, the east–west trending Yanshan mountain fault-fold belt (also known as the Yanshan seismic belt) marks the northern edge of the North China Craton (and of the alluvial plain). It is also the location of over half of the destructive earthquakes in Hebei province,[81] as under the plain several fault zones (oriented parallel to the Central Orogenic Belt) terminate against the Yanshan mountains.

Many of these faults are ancient, but have been reactivated by the force transmitted from the collision of the Indian Plate against the Eurasian Plate,[81] making the Eastern Block unusually active seismically, accounting for six of the ten deadliest earthquakes in recorded history.[82]

The Tangshan fault that ruptured 28 July runs right under the center of Tangshan City.[12] One of three faults in the Changdong fault zone, it runs approximately east-northeast (ENE) about 36 km to where it terminates against the north–south trending fault where, just to the south, the secondary M 7.1 quake occurred ("B" on the 'shaking' map).[83] The southern end of the Tangshan fault (it bends slightly at Tangshan) is near Ninghe, which was also the site of a M 6.2 earthquake several hours after the main shock, and an M 6.9 quake ("C") the following November. The Tangshan fault is considered shallow, but corresponds with a deeper and younger fault with somewhat differing characteristics.[84]

Question of prediction edit

Whether the Tangshan earthquake was predicted has had considerable political as well as seismological significance.

The 1975 Haicheng earthquake (about 400 km [250 miles] northeast of Tangshan) is regarded by seismologists as the only successful prediction of a major earthquake, although no mechanism has been proposed to explain this prediction, and no successful predictions have been achieved since.[85] The surprisingly light death toll – initial reports were of "very few people killed",[86] but later determined to be a modest 2,041[63]—for this magnitude Ms 7.5[1] quake, attributed to the precautionary measures taken following a definite short-term prediction, was proclaimed as a demonstration of the superiority of China's socialist system,[87] and incidentally a validation of the Chinese methodologies. However, it was later determined that the most important factor in anticipating the Haicheng earthquake was the extended series of significant foreshocks ("powerful messages from nature"[88]), and the low casualty rate was due largely to the time of day, hitting in the early evening when most people were neither at work nor asleep.[89]

Tangshan was not so fortunate.[90] Seventeen months later the 242,419 fatalities of the similarly sized Tangshan earthquake was therefore a considerable shock politically as well as seismically. While some of this greater mortality might be attributed to the exposure of a larger population, or the time of day (Haicheng was struck in the early evening, Tangshan while most people were asleep[89]), the principal factor appeared to be the failure to take any precautionary measures: Tangshan was entirely unprepared.[91]

At the time, the Chinese methods of earthquake prediction mainly consisted of watching for various precursors, including foreshocks,[92] and were celebrated for their success at Haicheng and elsewhere.[93] Many seismologists consider the Tangshan earthquakes to have not been predicted,[94] even "famously unpredicted",[95] and that it was not predictable due to a lack of precursory anomalous phenomena.[16] Furthermore, an investigation 30 years later found that there was no official short-term prediction of an imminent earthquake at Haicheng, and that, though there were many unofficial predictions of an imminent quake, none of those had a scientific basis.[96] The warnings that were made and precautions taken happened largely at the local level, based on general middle-term predictions, enhanced public awareness due to an educational campaign,[97] and a series of foreshocks. It is significant that at Tangshan there were no perceptible foreshocks.[98]

On the other hand, it is reported that several people at the State Seismological Bureau (SSB) wanted to warn of an impending earthquake somewhere in the region between Beijing and the Bohai Sea, and that this was discussed at several meetings.[99] One of these was a week-long national conference on earthquake predictions and preparation that convened in Tangshan on 14 July (two weeks before the earthquake) where Wang Chengmin is said to have warned there could be a magnitude 5+ earthquake in the Tangshan—Luanxian area between 22 July and 5 August.[100] However, in addition to the distractions of the Cultural Revolution, there was a possible disagreement within the SSB on whether the next large earthquake would be in eastern China (e.g. the Beijing area) or western China,[100] and that in May it had been concluded that no major earthquakes would occur in the Beijing–Tangshan area.[101] As it turned out, western China was hit by the magnitude 7.2 Songpan-Pingwu earthquake only three weeks after Tangshan,[102] showing that those arguing for the imminence of an earthquake in Western China were not entirely wrong.

At another meeting, on 26 July, there was a purported suggestion to not issue any warning, to avoid alarming the population.[103] The next morning, at an emergency meeting he requested with the Bureau's leadership, Wang was reportedly told by Deputy Chief Cha Zhiyuan that "We are currently very busy. We will discuss it again next week."[104] However, Cha has disputed this, claiming that Wang said there would be no major earthquakes.[101] Another account says Wang was directed to submit more information, then send a small group to observe the earthquake.[105]

 
The dilemma: an "abundance of caution" leads to many false alarms.

Some of the bureaucratic reticence to issue warnings and order precautionary measures likely resulted from too many predictions. These were often based on doubtful theories notorious for false alarms[106] that earthquakes can be predicted on the basis of droughts,[107] daily temperatures,[108] variations in geomagnetism,[100] or isolated anomalous phenomena. They were often too broad (magnitude "of at least 4.0 in the area of Beijing, Tianjin, Huailai, Tangshan, Bohai, and Zhangjiakou",[100] "in a few years"[109]) to warrant large-scale societal and economic disruption. Such disruptions could be serious: a false alarm in October, 1976, issued by the Shaanxi provincial government, is estimated to have disrupted the lives of 65% of the population of that province for half a year.[110] It has also been estimated that "in the fall of 1976 about 400 million of the then total population of 930 million of China spent some nights in temporary earthquake shelters."[111] This illustrates the classic dilemma of earthquake prediction: increasing the sensitivity to the possibility of an earthquake (i.e., reducing the failure to predict) increases the number of false alarms, which often has a significant cost.[112]

Comparison edit

Comparison of the Tangshan death toll – officially 242,419[113]—with other earthquake disasters is problematical because of uncertainty in the statistics. For example, the 1556 Shaanxi earthquake (estimated magnitude of ~8) is generally said to have been the deadliest earthquake disaster in history, with 830,000 deaths, based on Chinese historical records.[114] However, a Chinese language source[115] argues for only 530,000 deaths from the earthquake itself, with the larger number being the total reduction of population due to deaths from all causes (including exposure, disease, and famine) as well as people leaving the region due to economic collapse. Another Chinese source[116] states (without citing any sources) that the 1556 earthquake killed only about 100,000 directly, with another 700,000 dying of disease. Depending on what basis is used, the Tangshan disaster can thus be considered as approximately one-third, one-half, or twice as deadly as the Shaanxi disaster.

The other five deadliest earthquake disasters known in history,[117] with magnitudes ranging from 7.0 to 9.1, have had death tolls just under that of Tangshan's:

Other notably deadly earthquakes in the past century include:

Although unprepared,[91] compared to other earthquake disasters Tangshan did not experience significant common secondary disasters arising from fire, tsunami, landsliding, or flooding due to blocking of rivers or breaching of dikes. A dam holding back a large reservoir just above Tangshan was seriously damaged but did not fail;[126] similarly for another dam that imperiled Tianjin and some outlying districts of Beijing.[127]

The immediate and massive response by the government resulted in the rescue of thousands of people in the first two days (after which mortality increases rapidly),[128] while prompt attention to the problems of clean water, food, and public health avoided the mortality due to epidemic disease and starvation that often follows such disasters.[129]

Cultural references edit

Chinese director Feng Xiaogang's 2010 drama film Aftershock gives an account of the earthquake and its effects.

Footage of the incident appeared in the film Days of Fury (1979), directed by Fred Warshofsky and hosted by Vincent Price.[130]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Some early estimates varied widely, as high as 750,000. See the #Death toll section for the various fatality figures.
  2. ^ Also known as "Great Tangshan earthquake" in English sources, e.g. the voluminous work edited by Housner & He (2002).

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d ISC-EHB Event 711732 [IRIS].
  2. ^ a b ISC-EHB Event 711773 [IRIS].
  3. ^ Xinhua News Agency, 29 July 2017; Chen et al. 1988
  4. ^ Pararas-Carayannis, George (March 2001). The Big One: The Next Great California Earthquake; Understanding Why, Where, and when, It Will Happen. Forbes Pub. ISBN 9780970972507.
  5. ^ "'76 Termed Among Worst in Toll from Earthquakes". The New York Times. 24 January 1977.
  6. ^ Housner & He 2002, Prologue.
  7. ^ a b 夏明方 (2020). "家庭的解体与重生:历史视野下的唐山大地震". 文明的"双相"——灾害与历史的缠绕. 广西师范大学出版社. p. 79.
  8. ^ a b 王瓒玮 (28 July 2016). "唐山大地震四十年:反思与"记忆"". 东方历史评论. Reprinted as: 王瓒玮 (28 July 2016). . Jiemian. Archived from the original on 15 January 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2019.
  9. ^ a b Jennings 1980, p. 69.
  10. ^ Zhu 2002, p. 6.
  11. ^ Butler, Stewart & Kanamori 1979, p. 207. See figure 12 (p. 218) for an illustration. See also Zhu 2002, p. 8, Guo 2002, pp. 33–34.
  12. ^ a b Jennings 1980, p. 89.
  13. ^ Lomnitz & Lomnitz 1978, p. 109; Jennings 1980, p. 88.
  14. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 89, and see figure 4.17.
  15. ^ Jennings 1980, pp. 88, 92.
  16. ^ a b Lomnitz & Lomnitz 1978, p. 109.
  17. ^ Zhu 2002, p. 8, and see Table 4, p. 12.
  18. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 88, and see figure 15 in Guo 2002, p. 45.
  19. ^ a b Jennings 1980, p. 75.
  20. ^ Guo et al. 2022
  21. ^ Liu 2020
  22. ^ Chen, Liu & Wang 2021
  23. ^ Butler, Stewart & Kanamori 1979, pp. 217–218. See also Jennings 1980, figure 4.23, which plots damage as a function of epicentral distance and a measure of building strength.
  24. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 19.
  25. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 69; Yang 2002b, p. 176 [6].
  26. ^ Yao 2002, p. 244 [74].
  27. ^ Stoltman, Lidstone & Dechano 2004.
  28. ^ Yang 2002b, p. 172, and see figure 2, p. 182. An isoseismal map can be found in the front matter of Volume 4 28 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine.
  29. ^ a b Yang 2002b, p. 172.
  30. ^ Mao, Liang & Cui 2002, p. 231
  31. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 10.
  32. ^ Yang 2002b, p. 180, Table 1.
  33. ^ Xu 2002, p. 242.
  34. ^ a b Zhao 2002, p. 626.
  35. ^ Housner & He 2002, pp. 26–27; Wang, Cui & Liu 2002, p. 749.
  36. ^ Zhao 2002, p. 627.
  37. ^ a b Mi 2002, p. 765.
  38. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, p. 1, and see figures 1 and 4, pp. 40 and 41.
  39. ^ a b c Liao & Gu 2002, p. 1.
  40. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, figure 4.
  41. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, p. 2.
  42. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, figure 1.
  43. ^ Liao & Gu (2002, pp. 20+) has pictures.
  44. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, pp. 1, 2, 15–16, 18.
  45. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, pp. 8–10.
  46. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, p. 1. Strengthening is primarily a matter of "joining beam ends" securely so they do not pull apart, crush together, or slip off of a support.
  47. ^ Liao & Gu 2002, pp. 1–2, 8.
  48. ^ Wang, Cui & Liu 2002, p. 750.
  49. ^ UPI: as carried by The Daily Texan, 28 July 1976, page 3.
  50. ^ UPI: in The Daily Freeman (Kingston), 29 July 1976, p. 32.
  51. ^ UPI: in The Berkshire Eagle, 30 July 1976, p. 1.
  52. ^ Spignesi (2005, pp. 47–48) quotes from a geocities.com webpage of "Dr. George" that is no longer available. Spignesi quotes Pararas-Carayannis as saying that, in the 1556 earthquake, "in some counties the average death toll was 60 percent of the total population", and that it was reasonable to expect a similar proportion of deaths at Tangshan since the magnitudes were similar (assuming that the intensity of ground-shaking was also similar), and "since construction standards for this rural area had not changed significantly" (Spignesi 2005, pp. 47–48). However, that premise is false: the large death toll in Shaanxi has been attributed to the yaodong style of construction peculiar to that region, where rooms, and entire buildings, are carved out of a thick layer of soft sediments (loess) that blankets the region, leaving walls of weak material similar to adobe to support the roof (Golany 1992, pp. 7, 1).
  53. ^ , archived from the original on 6 December 2020, retrieved 18 July 2018.
  54. ^ UPI: Pacific Stars and Stripes, 7 August 1976, p. 11.
  55. ^ UPI: reported in The Redlands (California) Daily Facts, 5 January 1977, p. 5.
  56. ^ Malcolm 1977, p. 1.
  57. ^ Chen et al. 1988.
  58. ^ a b Xinhua News Agency, 29 July 2017.
  59. ^ CEA 2009.
  60. ^ Lin 1982
  61. ^ E.g.: Housner & He 2002, p. 17, footnote.
  62. ^ Whitham et al. 1976, p. 268.
  63. ^ a b Wang et al. 2006, p. 779.
  64. ^ Raleigh et al. (1977, p. 260), quoting the Peking Review (1975, p. 20), state:

    The link between politics and earthquake prediction is well expressed by the following statement: 'This is eloquent proof that in socialist New China, under the leadership of Chairman Mao and the Communist Party and by relying on the masses and professional seismological workers armed with Marxism – Leninism – Mao Tze-tung thought and preserving in practice and summing up experience conscientiously, not only can signs indicating an earthquake be observed but predictions and forecasts can be made and damage can be greatly minimized by doing a good job of precautionary work'.

    See also Cha (1976, p. 7), attributing achievement of rapid progress to "the victory of our great proletarian cultural revolution.

  65. ^ From a Xinhua News Agency press release published in all major Chinese newspapers 13 March 1975, quoted in Wang et al. 2006, p. 781. See also Chu 1976, p. 11, quoted in Geller 1997, p. 434.
  66. ^ Wang et al. 2006, Appendix E has a concise description of the Cultural Revolution.
  67. ^ Raleigh et al. 1977, p. 266; Cha 1976, p. 7.
  68. ^ Xiao 2013, p. 80.
  69. ^ Li 2016, p. 420.
  70. ^ Yeoh 2010, p. 273; Xiao 2013, p. 208.
  71. ^ ANSS: Sichuan 1976 . See 1976 Songpan–Pingwu earthquake.
  72. ^ Raleigh et al. 1977, pp. 258–259.
  73. ^ Raleigh et al. 1977, pp. 259–260.
  74. ^ Dikotter, Frank. "The Death of Mao: The Tangshan Earthquake and the Birth of the New China by James Palmer".
  75. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 77.
  76. ^ Jennings 1980, pp. 84–85, and see figure 4.14.
  77. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 84; Xing & Zou 2002, p. 88.
  78. ^ a b Guo 2002, p. 27.
  79. ^ Some say 1.8 Ga, others 2.5. See Kusky & Li 2003 and Kusky, Windley & Zhai 2007, p. 20 for details.
  80. ^ Kusky, Windley & Zhai 2007, p. 3.
  81. ^ a b Yang 2002a, p. 50.
  82. ^ Kusky, Windley & Zhai 2007, p. 20.
  83. ^ See figure 16 in Zhu 2002, p. 23, and figure 13 in Guo 2002, p. 43. The secondary quake occurred on a north oriented section of a fault in a zone that, coming from the southeast, turns north, and then gets complicated.
  84. ^ Guo 2002, pp. 30–31.
  85. ^ Wang et al. 2006, p. 757
  86. ^ Hammond 1976.
  87. ^ Wang et al. 2006, p. 781.
  88. ^ Wang et al. 2006, p. 777.
  89. ^ a b Wang et al. 2006, p. 780.
  90. ^ Kerr 1979, p. 543.
  91. ^ a b Xie & Qu 2018, p. 5.
  92. ^ Lomnitz & Lomnitz 1978, pp. 109–110.
  93. ^ Lomnitz & Lomnitz (1978, p. 109) mention "the Lungling and Yenyuen earthquakes, both accurately predicted". See also Jennings 1980 (p. 6) and Chen & Wang 2010 regarding the Sungpan—Pingwu (or Songpan) earthquake.
  94. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 6; Geller 1997, p. 434; ICEF 2011, p. 351.
  95. ^ Scholz 1997.
  96. ^ Wang et al. 2006, p. 785.
  97. ^ See also Jennings 1980, pp. 64–67.
  98. ^ Jennings 1980, p. 81.
  99. ^ Bo 2010, Chapter 7.
  100. ^ a b c d Bo 2010, p. 281.
  101. ^ a b Bo 2010, p. 284.
  102. ^ Chen & Wang 2010, p. 2844.
  103. ^ Bo 2010, p. 282.
  104. ^ Bo 2010, p. 283.
  105. ^ Peng 2008, p. 9
  106. ^ Chen & Wang 2010, p. 2847.
  107. ^ Bo 2010, p. 279.
  108. ^ Bo 2010, p. 286.
  109. ^ Bo 2010, p. 287.
  110. ^ Chen & Wang 2010, p. 2846.
  111. ^ Chen & Wang 2010, p. 2846, citing a Chinese source.
  112. ^ ICEF 2011, p. 351.
  113. ^ Xinhua News Agency, 29 July 2017. The initial estimates of 600,000 to 750,000 deaths were based on a faulty comparison with the Shaanxi earthquake. Spignesi 2005, pp. 47–48.
  114. ^ Hou et al. 1998, p. 549.
  115. ^ Wang 2007.
  116. ^ Wang, Cui & Liu 2002, p. 757.
  117. ^ See U.S. Geological Survey, Significant Earthquakes.
  118. ^ (PDF). TEC. July 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 August 2006. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  119. ^ . U.S. Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 5 June 2013.
  120. ^ "Indian Ocean tsunami anniversary: Memorial events held". BBC News. 26 December 2014. Retrieved 15 December 2016.
  121. ^ https://www.cjr.org/behind_the_news/one_year_later_haitian_earthqu.php?page=all Columbia Journalism Review, "Two Years Later, Haitian Earthquake Death Toll in Dispute", 20 January 2012
  122. ^ Kolbe, Athena R.; Hutson, Royce A.; Shannon, Harry; Trzcinski, Eileen; Miles, Bart; Levitz, Naomi; Puccio, Marie; James, Leah; Roger Noel, Jean; Muggah, Robert (2010). "Mortality, crime and access to basic needs before and after the Haiti earthquake: a random survey of Port-au-Prince households". Medicine, Conflict and Survival. 26 (4): 281–297. doi:10.1080/13623699.2010.535279. PMID 21314081. S2CID 26000167.
  123. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 June 2013. Retrieved 17 March 2012. U.S. Geological Survey, Earthquakes with 50,000 or More Deaths
  124. ^ Chen, Na (21 December 2010). "Death Toll of 1920 China Earthquake Higher than Previously Estimated". Chinese Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  125. ^ . Earthquake.usgs.gov. Archived from the original on 1 September 2009. Retrieved 26 October 2011.
  126. ^ Dong & Wang 2002.
  127. ^ Qian & Zhu 2002.
  128. ^ Wang, Cui & Liu 2002, p. 748.
  129. ^ Shen 2002; Wang, Cui & Liu 2002.
  130. ^ "Watch Days of Fury (1979) on the Internet Archive". 1979.

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  • Chen, Yuxuan; Liu, Mian; Wang, Hui (2021), "Aftershocks and Background Seismicity in Tangshan and the Rest of North China", Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 126 (5): 625–645, Bibcode:2021JGRB..12621395C, doi:10.1029/2020JB021395, S2CID 234848679.

Further reading edit

  • Qian Gang. The Great China Earthquake. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press, 1989. ISBN 0835122271.
  • James Palmer. Heaven Cracks, Earth Shakes: The Tangshan Earthquake and the Death of Mao's China. New York: Basic Books, 2011. ISBN 978-0-465-01478-1 (hardcover alk. paper) 9780465023493 (ebk. alk. paper).
  • Report on The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976: English translation of an extensive Chinese report from 1986.
  • Knotts, Joey (5 December 2019). "Beijing Tremors a Ghostly Reminder of Catastrophic 1976 Tangshan Quake". The Beijinger.

External links edit

  • at GlobalWatch.org
  • The International Seismological Centre has a bibliography and/or authoritative data for this event.
  • An isoseismal map (showing the different zones of shaking intensity) of the Tangshan earthquake can be found here 28 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine.

1976, tangshan, earthquake, chinese, 唐山大地震, pinyin, tángshān, dìzhèn, great, tangshan, earthquake, earthquake, that, region, around, tangshan, hebei, china, july, 1976, maximum, intensity, earthquake, extreme, mercalli, scale, minutes, percent, buildings, tang. The 1976 Tangshan earthquake Chinese 唐山大地震 pinyin Tangshan da dizhen lit Great Tangshan earthquake b was a Mw 7 6 earthquake that hit the region around Tangshan Hebei China at 3 42 a m on 28 July 1976 The maximum intensity of the earthquake was XI Extreme on the Mercalli scale In minutes 85 percent of the buildings in Tangshan collapsed or were rendered unusable all services failed and most of the highway and railway bridges collapsed or were seriously damaged 6 The official report claimed 242 769 deaths and 164 851 serious injuries in Tangshan but when taken into account the missing the injured who later died and the deaths in nearby Beijing and Tianjin scholars accepted at least 300 000 died 7 8 making it one of the worst disasters in China by death toll 1976 Tangshan earthquake唐山大地震UTC timeDoublet earthquake A 1976 07 27 19 42 55 B 1976 07 28 10 45 36ISC event A 711732 B 711773USGS ANSS A ComCat B ComCatLocal date28 July 1976Local timePeking time A 03 43 B 18 45Magnitude A 7 6 Mw 7 6 Ms 1 B 7 0 Mw 7 4 Ms 2 DepthA 12 2 km 1 B 16 7 km 2 Epicenter39 38 N 118 06 E 39 63 N 118 10 E 39 63 118 10 39 43 N 118 26 E 39 72 N 118 44 E 39 72 118 44Max intensityXI Extreme Casualties242 419 3 a to 655 000 4 5 Contents 1 The earthquakes 2 Damage 2 1 Intensity XI and X zone 2 2 Intensity IX and VIII zone 2 3 Intensity VII zone 2 4 Coal mines 2 5 Railways 3 Death toll 3 1 Early reports 3 2 Official figures 4 Political aspects 5 Geology 6 Question of prediction 7 Comparison 8 Cultural references 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksThe earthquakes editThe Tangshan earthquake was composed of two main shocks The first struck at 3 42 56 in the morning local time approximately 12 km under the southern part of Tangshan 9 The magnitude was initially estimated at 8 1 subsequently recalculated to be 7 6 on the standard Mw scale 1 However that scale measures only the total energy released by an earthquake and earthquakes vary in how much of that energy is converted to seismic shaking The Tangshan quake being relatively shallow converted much of its energy to surface shaking and on the Ms surface magnitude scale it also measured 7 6 7 8 on the Chinese surface magnitude scale 10 This occurred on a near vertical right lateral strike slip fault striking N40 E 11 the block on the southeast side sliding about three meters to the southwest 12 This resulted from tectonic compression on a nearly west east axis 13 Surface rupturing occurred in five en echelon segments extending eight kilometers through the center of Tangshan 14 The second main shock with a magnitude 7 0 Mw or 7 4 Ms struck that afternoon at 18 45 near Luanxian about 70 km to the east northeast B on the intensity map in the next section just south of the northeastern end of the Tangshan fault 15 This occurred in a zone of north northwest striking conjugate faults that cut across the north end of the Tangshan fault The left lateral motion here along with the right lateral motion on the Tangshan fault suggests that as the crustal blocks to the west and east are compressed together the block between these two earthquakes is being squeezed out to the south A long sequence of aftershocks followed with twelve of magnitude 6 or greater 16 The first of these struck just three and a half hours after the initial shock at 7 17 at the southern end of Tangshan fault near Ninghe C on the map in the section below 17 with a magnitude of 6 2 Ms Another significant aftershock Ms 6 9 occurred in November near Ninghe Most aftershocks occurred between these end points in a zone 140 km long and about 50 km wide 18 Many buildings were further damaged by the aftershocks 19 The aftershock zone remains seismically active in the twenty first century Earthquakes measuring 4 5 Ms to 4 7 Ms occurred in 2012 2016 and 2019 On 12 July 2020 a 5 1 Ms strike slip earthquake struck the northern part of the Tangshan Fault It produced its own sequence of aftershocks that ended on 17 July 2020 20 The earthquake only caused minor damage to buildings in Tangshan 21 Its occurrence stirred a debate among scientists into whether the recent earthquakes are aftershocks of the 1976 event or are background seismicity 22 Damage editExtent of significant shaking nbsp Interactive fullscreen map nearby articles Approximate extent of different intensities of shaking isoseismals Heaviest damage was within the dark brown line intensity VII and greater Diamonds locate the two principal shocks A and B and the area of several M gt 6 aftershocks near Ninghe C The damage done by an earthquake depends primarily on two factors First the intensity of shaking which depends mainly on the magnitude of the earthquake rupture the distance from the epicenter and the nature of the local soil and topography with soft soils e g sediments and fill more likely to amplify the intensity and duration of the shaking 23 Second the design and construction of the structures being shaken with houses built of adobe or stone wooden houses without a well built frame and unreinforced masonry construction being especially vulnerable 24 The seismic risk had been greatly underestimated and almost all buildings and structures were designed and built without seismic considerations 19 As a result Tangshan was mainly a city of unreinforced brick buildings 9 sitting right on top of a major fault line The power magnitude of the Tangshan earthquake is indicated by the extent of where it was felt up to 1 100 km 680 mi away across most of northeastern China and even in Mongolia and Korea 25 In and around Beijing 140 km 87 mi from the epicenter the shaking reached an intensity of VI on the Chinese intensity scale similar to the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale with nearly 10 of all buildings damaged 26 and at least 50 fatalities The economic loss totaled to 10 billion yuan 27 Intensity XI and X zone edit The rupture occurred under the southern part of the city and propagated northeastward on a fault that runs through the middle of the city The maximum intensity was XI eleven on the 12 degree Chinese scale Nearly every building and structure in the city collapsed wholly or partially infrastructure was severely damaged and essential services such as electric power water supply and communications were entirely knocked out This area of maximum damage the meizoseismal area was approximately 10 5 kilometres 6 5 mi long and from 3 5 to 5 5 km wide centered roughly along the railway 28 The area of intensity X shaking where only new one story brick buildings were merely damaged or slightly damaged the rest being severely damaged or worse was 36 km long and 15 km across 29 In this high intensity zone intensity X and XI within the red contour on the map 20 highway bridges and five railway bridges cross the Douhe River in Tangshan only six survived with only minor damage 30 Intensity IX and VIII zone edit Shaking of intensity IX or greater occurred in a zone roughly 78 km 48 mi long and 42 km 26 mi about 1800 km2 inner orange contour on the map and also around the aftershocks at Luanxian and Ninghe In this zone most buildings classified as Class III well built buildings of wood masonry or reinforced concrete 31 survived 32 but many Class II buildings typically old wood frame buildings lacking a well built frame and quite common outside of the cities were destroyed while a majority of Class I buildings built of adobe or stone were destroyed Further out to the outer orange contour and around the city of Tianjin and a few isolated patches intensity VIII shaking mostly affected Class I buildings more than half destroyed bridges and tall brick chimneys Railway track was also subject to bending or displacement depending on soil conditions 29 Intensity VII zone edit The zone of intensity VII shaking inside the dark brown contour marks the extent of moderate damage where many Class I structures of weak design or construction were damaged but only few between 10 and 30 were destroyed and only a few Class two buildings damaged This ellipsoid zone extended about 75 km north and south of Tangshan and 120 km east and west from about 25 km short of Beijing to short of Qinhuangdao City which had anomalously higher shaking and from the Sea of Bohai in the south and southwest to just north of Zunhua The north south shortening of this zone is attributed to buttressing by the bedrock of the Yanshin mountains Significant damage occurred beyond this in the VI zone but like in Beijing affected less than 10 of the buildings or occurred in small localized areas 33 Coal mines edit Mining coal is Tangshan s principal industry and when the quake struck around 10 000 miners were underground For the most part the mine roadways tunnels were not seriously damaged but with the loss of electrical power there was no illumination aside from headlamps no ventilation and no working lifts 34 It is reported that most miners escaped within hours but that some did not reach the surface until two weeks later 35 Most of the damage to the vertical shafts occurred within the first 50 meters where they pass through the water bearing alluvium In many cases the concrete liner built to keep out the water cracked particularly where not built properly allowing a much greater inflow of water Coupled with damage to the underground drainage system and lack of power to drive the pumps many of the various mines flooded 36 Some electrical power to the mines was restored in three days and some coal production resumed within ten days 37 However de watering overhauling of flooded electrical equipment and rebuilding of surface buildings and structures continued for a year and a half the pre earthquake level of production was not reached until the end of 1977 37 Railways edit The Beijing Shanhaiguan Railway built in 1887 is a double track Class I trunk line that runs from Beijing southeast to Tianjin and Tanggu then turns northeast to cross the Yongdingxin River and its estuary to run to Ninghe and then Tangshan From Tangshan it continues northeast and then east to Chengli and then to Qinhuangdao and Shanhaiguan This is the principal connection of Beijing Tianjin and Tangshan to the seaports and to Northeast China The Tongxian to Tuozitou within modern day Luan County Railway built in 1976 is a single track Class I trunk line that runs east from the eastern outskirts of Beijing to where it meets the Beijing to Shanhaiguan line northeast of Tangshan near the epicenter of the M 7 1 quake 38 All of this was built with no consideration for earthquake resistant design 39 although some earthquake resistance measures for large and medium bridges were applied following the 1975 Haicheng earthquake These vital arteries and other railways and branch lines were seriously damaged by the earthquakes mainly in the areas of intensity IX or greater shaking 40 This includes a large area around Tangshan quake and areas around Ninghe and Luanxian following the M 6 9 and M 7 4 aftershocks At the time of the main quake there were 28 freight trains and seven passenger trains traveling on the Beijing Shanhaiguan line in the affected area seven freight trains and two passenger trains derailed due to derangement of the rails 41 mostly south of Tangshan 42 where the line was built on loose alluvium diluvium and occasional stretches of loose sand 39 In many of these cases and also similar cases northeast of Tangshan and on the Tongxian Tuozitou line east of Fengrun the railway embankment slumped due to weak soils In other cases the embankment held but transverse compression of the rails caused them to buckle 43 Railway operations were further impaired by the loss of communications including signalling and water supply for the steam locomotives in both cases due mainly to collapse of buildings and loss of electrical power 44 However the most serious damage taking the most manpower and longest time to repair was that involving bridges 45 Most difficult was where soft or liquefied soil allowed the bank to slide into the river shifting the abutments A more frequent problem was where an approach embankment subsided typically leaving the rails suspended from the abutment There were numerous cases where concrete piers and abutments were damaged due to inadequate design and construction bridges that were strengthened following the Haicheng earthquake survived with only slight damage 46 It was observed that at intensity VII and above damage to the roadbed was correlated mainly with loose soil and a high water table Conversely bridges and rails in Tangshan City built on dense soil with a deep water table were largely undamaged even though subject to intensity XI shaking 47 Over forty two thousand people were mobilized to quickly effect emergency repair of the railways 48 The Tongxian Tuozitou line was opened for traffic on 3 August single track of the Beijing Shanhaiguan line opened on 7 August and both tracks on 10 August albeit at restricted speeds over temporary bridges and at other places where repairs were not yet complete 39 Death toll edit nbsp A Tangshan earthquake memorial in TianjinThe official report claimed 242 769 deaths and 164 851 serious injuries in Tangshan but when taken into account the missing the injured who later died and the deaths in nearby Beijing and Tianjin scholars accepted at least 300 000 died 7 8 making it the deadliest earthquake in China and among the top disasters in China by death toll Unofficial estimates of the death toll varied widely and generally lack a clear authoritative basis Early reports edit One of the earliest reports outside of China came on 28 July 1976 from the International Tsunami Information Center reporting that a violent earthquake initially estimated at magnitude 8 1 had struck in the vicinity of Peking Beijing Center Director Dr George Pararas Carayannis was reported as saying that if the quake hit in a populated area reports of considerable damage could be expected 49 News reports the next day located the quake about 100 miles 160 km southeast of Peking and 63 miles 101 km northeast of Tientsen Tianjin i e almost precisely in Tangshan 50 The Chinese Communist party s Central Committee also broadcast a statement that the quake caused great losses to people s life and property One of the first reports from Tangshan said nearly every building in the city was flattened 51 There were several reports of 50 people killed in Beijing a 100 miles 160 km from the epicenter According to author Stephen Spignesi a couple of days after the quake Dr Pararas Carayannis gave United Press International UPI an estimate of 700 000 to 750 000 deaths based on a similar sized earthquake in Shaanxi province in 1556 that caused 830 000 deaths 52 Pararas Carayannis current web page 53 says only that it was fairly accurately estimated that there were at least 655 000 people dead without mentioning by whom or on what basis this estimate was made In August the Nationalist Chinese government in Taiwan announced that according to their agents in China the death toll was over 100 000 with about 900 000 injured They also reported that almost all buildings in Tangshan were leveled and 80 percent of homes and buildings in Tianjin suffered damage to some extent 54 The following January 1977 the Nationalists released a document they said had been presented at an emergency conference on relief work the previous August by the Hebei Provincial Committee of the party and the Hebei Revolutionary Committee 55 According to this document in such seriously stricken areas as Tangshan municipality and Fengnan and Feng yun there were 655 237 persons dead Some 79 000 persons were seriously injured and some 700 000 persons suffered various degrees of injuries Though these figures have been widely cited it does not appear there has ever been inquiry into how they were derived of whether they were an initial estimate made in the first few days following the quake or had a more solid basis citation needed In the following June it was reported 56 that the Chinese authorities had briefed seismologist Cinna Lomnitz about Tangshan It was noted that though no figures were provided they did not deny any published estimates Official figures edit nbsp Section 4C of the Tangshan Earthquake Memorial WallA 1988 book by several members of the Chinese State Seismological Bureau states that 242 419 people died in the quake 57 which reflects the official figure reported by the state run Xinhua News Agency 58 A webpage of the Chinese Earthquake Administration dated 2009 59 also attributes 242 769 deaths and 164 851 serious injuries to the Tangshan quake based on an early 1982 study 60 There are various reports that the official death toll was later given by the Chinese government as 275 000 61 without specifying a source As of 2017 the Tangshan Earthquake Memorial Wall contained the names of 246 465 victims who were registered by relatives 58 Political aspects editThe remarkably low death toll of the Haicheng earthquake the previous year initially said to be fewer than 300 62 much later estimated at a still very modest 2 041 63 had been credited to measures taken in response to an accurate and timely prediction This was touted as demonstrating the validity of the Chinese methods of earthquake prediction including inspiration from Mao Zedong Thought 64 and the superiority of our country s socialist system 65 With China in the midst of the Cultural Revolution 66 belief in earthquake prediction was made an element of ideological orthodoxy that distinguished the true party liners from right wing deviationists and it was everyone s duty to criticize those who doubted the feasibility of earthquake prediction 67 As a backdrop to this and of deep concern to the Chinese Communist Party 68 was a collectively recognized but unvoiced awareness 69 that in traditional Chinese belief natural disasters are considered disruptions in the natural order of heaven Tian and may signify the loss of legitimacy the mandate of heaven of the current government 70 This view was underlined by a magnitude 6 7 earthquake in southwestern China just three weeks later 71 On the other hand an ongoing mass education campaign before the quake showed that the government was aware and concerned and the prompt and massive response following the quake demonstrated the government s competence to alleviate suffering and restore normal production drawing on resources from across the nation 72 This was contrasted with the hardships faced by disaster victims especially the poor under previous regimes where assistance was lacking 73 Mao Zedong was already ailing at the time of the earthquake In the event he died only six weeks later on September 9 1976 ushering the downfall of the Gang of Four and bringing the Cultural Revolution to an end 74 Geology edit nbsp Tectonic elements surrounding the North China Craton on which Tangshan lies Tangshan lies at the northern edge of the Beijing Tianjin Tangshan Plain an alluvial plain that stretches from Beijing to the Sea of Bohai 75 This plain the northeastern corner of the great North China Plain is where sediments eroded from the Yanshan mountains to the north have filled in the ancient Sea of Bohai with Tangshan near where the shore was about 4 000 years ago 76 To the south these sediments have formed a layer of weak soils as much as three kilometers thick At Tangshan and northward these sediments are thinner where the underlying strata crops out to form isolated hills 77 This underlying strata is a thick typically 10 km layer of mainly sedimentary strata such as limestone and sandstone with large deposits of coal 78 Tangshan is located particularly over a northeast oriented syncline a fold in the sedimentary strata that has brought massive deposits of coal close enough to the surface to be mined In this area the overlying alluvium varies in thickness from several meters to around 600 m 2 000 ft 34 Underlying all this is the ancient bedrock of different kinds of metamorphic rock such as schist gneiss quartzite granulite etc that form the Eastern Block of the North China Craton 78 This craton see figure was formed approximately two billion years ago 79 by the collision of two major crustal blocks that left a belt of uplifted mountains the Central China Orogenic Belt COB that crosses China approximately southwest to northeast passing just west and north of Beijing 80 Just north of Zunhua another orogenic belt the east west trending Yanshan mountain fault fold belt also known as the Yanshan seismic belt marks the northern edge of the North China Craton and of the alluvial plain It is also the location of over half of the destructive earthquakes in Hebei province 81 as under the plain several fault zones oriented parallel to the Central Orogenic Belt terminate against the Yanshan mountains Many of these faults are ancient but have been reactivated by the force transmitted from the collision of the Indian Plate against the Eurasian Plate 81 making the Eastern Block unusually active seismically accounting for six of the ten deadliest earthquakes in recorded history 82 The Tangshan fault that ruptured 28 July runs right under the center of Tangshan City 12 One of three faults in the Changdong fault zone it runs approximately east northeast ENE about 36 km to where it terminates against the north south trending fault where just to the south the secondary M 7 1 quake occurred B on the shaking map 83 The southern end of the Tangshan fault it bends slightly at Tangshan is near Ninghe which was also the site of a M 6 2 earthquake several hours after the main shock and an M 6 9 quake C the following November The Tangshan fault is considered shallow but corresponds with a deeper and younger fault with somewhat differing characteristics 84 Question of prediction editFurther information Earthquake prediction Whether the Tangshan earthquake was predicted has had considerable political as well as seismological significance The 1975 Haicheng earthquake about 400 km 250 miles northeast of Tangshan is regarded by seismologists as the only successful prediction of a major earthquake although no mechanism has been proposed to explain this prediction and no successful predictions have been achieved since 85 The surprisingly light death toll initial reports were of very few people killed 86 but later determined to be a modest 2 041 63 for this magnitude Ms 7 5 1 quake attributed to the precautionary measures taken following a definite short term prediction was proclaimed as a demonstration of the superiority of China s socialist system 87 and incidentally a validation of the Chinese methodologies However it was later determined that the most important factor in anticipating the Haicheng earthquake was the extended series of significant foreshocks powerful messages from nature 88 and the low casualty rate was due largely to the time of day hitting in the early evening when most people were neither at work nor asleep 89 Tangshan was not so fortunate 90 Seventeen months later the 242 419 fatalities of the similarly sized Tangshan earthquake was therefore a considerable shock politically as well as seismically While some of this greater mortality might be attributed to the exposure of a larger population or the time of day Haicheng was struck in the early evening Tangshan while most people were asleep 89 the principal factor appeared to be the failure to take any precautionary measures Tangshan was entirely unprepared 91 At the time the Chinese methods of earthquake prediction mainly consisted of watching for various precursors including foreshocks 92 and were celebrated for their success at Haicheng and elsewhere 93 Many seismologists consider the Tangshan earthquakes to have not been predicted 94 even famously unpredicted 95 and that it was not predictable due to a lack of precursory anomalous phenomena 16 Furthermore an investigation 30 years later found that there was no official short term prediction of an imminent earthquake at Haicheng and that though there were many unofficial predictions of an imminent quake none of those had a scientific basis 96 The warnings that were made and precautions taken happened largely at the local level based on general middle term predictions enhanced public awareness due to an educational campaign 97 and a series of foreshocks It is significant that at Tangshan there were no perceptible foreshocks 98 On the other hand it is reported that several people at the State Seismological Bureau SSB wanted to warn of an impending earthquake somewhere in the region between Beijing and the Bohai Sea and that this was discussed at several meetings 99 One of these was a week long national conference on earthquake predictions and preparation that convened in Tangshan on 14 July two weeks before the earthquake where Wang Chengmin is said to have warned there could be a magnitude 5 earthquake in the Tangshan Luanxian area between 22 July and 5 August 100 However in addition to the distractions of the Cultural Revolution there was a possible disagreement within the SSB on whether the next large earthquake would be in eastern China e g the Beijing area or western China 100 and that in May it had been concluded that no major earthquakes would occur in the Beijing Tangshan area 101 As it turned out western China was hit by the magnitude 7 2 Songpan Pingwu earthquake only three weeks after Tangshan 102 showing that those arguing for the imminence of an earthquake in Western China were not entirely wrong At another meeting on 26 July there was a purported suggestion to not issue any warning to avoid alarming the population 103 The next morning at an emergency meeting he requested with the Bureau s leadership Wang was reportedly told by Deputy Chief Cha Zhiyuan that We are currently very busy We will discuss it again next week 104 However Cha has disputed this claiming that Wang said there would be no major earthquakes 101 Another account says Wang was directed to submit more information then send a small group to observe the earthquake 105 nbsp The dilemma an abundance of caution leads to many false alarms Some of the bureaucratic reticence to issue warnings and order precautionary measures likely resulted from too many predictions These were often based on doubtful theories notorious for false alarms 106 that earthquakes can be predicted on the basis of droughts 107 daily temperatures 108 variations in geomagnetism 100 or isolated anomalous phenomena They were often too broad magnitude of at least 4 0 in the area of Beijing Tianjin Huailai Tangshan Bohai and Zhangjiakou 100 in a few years 109 to warrant large scale societal and economic disruption Such disruptions could be serious a false alarm in October 1976 issued by the Shaanxi provincial government is estimated to have disrupted the lives of 65 of the population of that province for half a year 110 It has also been estimated that in the fall of 1976 about 400 million of the then total population of 930 million of China spent some nights in temporary earthquake shelters 111 This illustrates the classic dilemma of earthquake prediction increasing the sensitivity to the possibility of an earthquake i e reducing the failure to predict increases the number of false alarms which often has a significant cost 112 Comparison editComparison of the Tangshan death toll officially 242 419 113 with other earthquake disasters is problematical because of uncertainty in the statistics For example the 1556 Shaanxi earthquake estimated magnitude of 8 is generally said to have been the deadliest earthquake disaster in history with 830 000 deaths based on Chinese historical records 114 However a Chinese language source 115 argues for only 530 000 deaths from the earthquake itself with the larger number being the total reduction of population due to deaths from all causes including exposure disease and famine as well as people leaving the region due to economic collapse Another Chinese source 116 states without citing any sources that the 1556 earthquake killed only about 100 000 directly with another 700 000 dying of disease Depending on what basis is used the Tangshan disaster can thus be considered as approximately one third one half or twice as deadly as the Shaanxi disaster The other five deadliest earthquake disasters known in history 117 with magnitudes ranging from 7 0 to 9 1 have had death tolls just under that of Tangshan s 1138 Aleppo earthquake Syria magnitude unknown 230 000 deaths 2004 Sumatra earthquake Indonesia M 9 1 227 898 deaths mostly due to tsunamis 118 119 120 2010 Haiti earthquake M 7 0 100 000 316 000 deaths 121 122 123 1920 Haiyuan Gansu earthquake China M 7 8 200 000 273 400 deaths 124 125 856 Damghan earthquake Iran magnitude unknown 200 000 deaths Other notably deadly earthquakes in the past century include 1923 Great Kantō earthquake Japan M 7 9 142 800 deaths mostly due to fire 1948 Ashgabat earthquake Turkmenistan M 7 3 110 000 deaths Although unprepared 91 compared to other earthquake disasters Tangshan did not experience significant common secondary disasters arising from fire tsunami landsliding or flooding due to blocking of rivers or breaching of dikes A dam holding back a large reservoir just above Tangshan was seriously damaged but did not fail 126 similarly for another dam that imperiled Tianjin and some outlying districts of Beijing 127 The immediate and massive response by the government resulted in the rescue of thousands of people in the first two days after which mortality increases rapidly 128 while prompt attention to the problems of clean water food and public health avoided the mortality due to epidemic disease and starvation that often follows such disasters 129 Cultural references editChinese director Feng Xiaogang s 2010 drama film Aftershock gives an account of the earthquake and its effects Footage of the incident appeared in the film Days of Fury 1979 directed by Fred Warshofsky and hosted by Vincent Price 130 See also edit nbsp China portal nbsp Earth sciences portalList of earthquakes in China List of disasters in China by death toll List of earthquakes in 1976 Tangshan Earthquake Memorial ParkNotes edit Some early estimates varied widely as high as 750 000 See the Death toll section for the various fatality figures Also known as Great Tangshan earthquake in English sources e g the voluminous work edited by Housner amp He 2002 References edit a b c d ISC EHB Event 711732 IRIS a b ISC EHB Event 711773 IRIS Xinhua News Agency 29 July 2017 Chen et al 1988 Pararas Carayannis George March 2001 The Big One The Next Great California Earthquake Understanding Why Where and when It Will Happen Forbes Pub ISBN 9780970972507 76 Termed Among Worst in Toll from Earthquakes The New York Times 24 January 1977 Housner amp He 2002 Prologue a b 夏明方 2020 家庭的解体与重生 历史视野下的唐山大地震 文明的 双相 灾害与历史的缠绕 广西师范大学出版社 p 79 a b 王瓒玮 28 July 2016 唐山大地震四十年 反思与 记忆 东方历史评论 Reprinted as 王瓒玮 28 July 2016 唐山大地震40年 从死亡人数到天灾还是人祸仍是一地鸡毛 Jiemian Archived from the original on 15 January 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2019 a b Jennings 1980 p 69 Zhu 2002 p 6 Butler Stewart amp Kanamori 1979 p 207 See figure 12 p 218 for an illustration See also Zhu 2002 p 8 Guo 2002 pp 33 34 a b Jennings 1980 p 89 Lomnitz amp Lomnitz 1978 p 109 Jennings 1980 p 88 Jennings 1980 p 89 and see figure 4 17 Jennings 1980 pp 88 92 a b Lomnitz amp Lomnitz 1978 p 109 Zhu 2002 p 8 and see Table 4 p 12 Jennings 1980 p 88 and see figure 15 in Guo 2002 p 45 a b Jennings 1980 p 75 Guo et al 2022 Liu 2020 Chen Liu amp Wang 2021 Butler Stewart amp Kanamori 1979 pp 217 218 See also Jennings 1980 figure 4 23 which plots damage as a function of epicentral distance and a measure of building strength Jennings 1980 p 19 Jennings 1980 p 69 Yang 2002b p 176 6 Yao 2002 p 244 74 Stoltman Lidstone amp Dechano 2004 Yang 2002b p 172 and see figure 2 p 182 An isoseismal map can be found in the front matter of Volume 4 Archived 28 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine a b Yang 2002b p 172 Mao Liang amp Cui 2002 p 231 Jennings 1980 p 10 Yang 2002b p 180 Table 1 Xu 2002 p 242 a b Zhao 2002 p 626 Housner amp He 2002 pp 26 27 Wang Cui amp Liu 2002 p 749 Zhao 2002 p 627 a b Mi 2002 p 765 Liao amp Gu 2002 p 1 and see figures 1 and 4 pp 40 and 41 a b c Liao amp Gu 2002 p 1 Liao amp Gu 2002 figure 4 Liao amp Gu 2002 p 2 Liao amp Gu 2002 figure 1 Liao amp Gu 2002 pp 20 has pictures Liao amp Gu 2002 pp 1 2 15 16 18 Liao amp Gu 2002 pp 8 10 Liao amp Gu 2002 p 1 Strengthening is primarily a matter of joining beam ends securely so they do not pull apart crush together or slip off of a support Liao amp Gu 2002 pp 1 2 8 Wang Cui amp Liu 2002 p 750 UPI as carried by The Daily Texan 28 July 1976 page 3 UPI in The Daily Freeman Kingston 29 July 1976 p 32 UPI in The Berkshire Eagle 30 July 1976 p 1 Spignesi 2005 pp 47 48 quotes from a geocities com webpage of Dr George that is no longer available Spignesi quotes Pararas Carayannis as saying that in the 1556 earthquake in some counties the average death toll was 60 percent of the total population and that it was reasonable to expect a similar proportion of deaths at Tangshan since the magnitudes were similar assuming that the intensity of ground shaking was also similar and since construction standards for this rural area had not changed significantly Spignesi 2005 pp 47 48 However that premise is false the large death toll in Shaanxi has been attributed to the yaodong style of construction peculiar to that region where rooms and entire buildings are carved out of a thick layer of soft sediments loess that blankets the region leaving walls of weak material similar to adobe to support the roof Golany 1992 pp 7 1 The China Earthquake of 1976 archived from the original on 6 December 2020 retrieved 18 July 2018 UPI Pacific Stars and Stripes 7 August 1976 p 11 UPI reported in The Redlands California Daily Facts 5 January 1977 p 5 Malcolm 1977 p 1 Chen et al 1988 a b Xinhua News Agency 29 July 2017 CEA 2009 Lin 1982 E g Housner amp He 2002 p 17 footnote Whitham et al 1976 p 268 a b Wang et al 2006 p 779 Raleigh et al 1977 p 260 quoting the Peking Review 1975 p 20 state The link between politics and earthquake prediction is well expressed by the following statement This is eloquent proof that in socialist New China under the leadership of Chairman Mao and the Communist Party and by relying on the masses and professional seismological workers armed with Marxism Leninism Mao Tze tung thought and preserving in practice and summing up experience conscientiously not only can signs indicating an earthquake be observed but predictions and forecasts can be made and damage can be greatly minimized by doing a good job of precautionary work See also Cha 1976 p 7 attributing achievement of rapid progress to the victory of our great proletarian cultural revolution From a Xinhua News Agency press release published in all major Chinese newspapers 13 March 1975 quoted in Wang et al 2006 p 781 See also Chu 1976 p 11 quoted in Geller 1997 p 434 Wang et al 2006 Appendix E has a concise description of the Cultural Revolution Raleigh et al 1977 p 266 Cha 1976 p 7 Xiao 2013 p 80 Li 2016 p 420 Yeoh 2010 p 273 Xiao 2013 p 208 ANSS Sichuan 1976 See 1976 Songpan Pingwu earthquake Raleigh et al 1977 pp 258 259 Raleigh et al 1977 pp 259 260 Dikotter Frank The Death of Mao The Tangshan Earthquake and the Birth of the New China by James Palmer Jennings 1980 p 77 Jennings 1980 pp 84 85 and see figure 4 14 Jennings 1980 p 84 Xing amp Zou 2002 p 88 a b Guo 2002 p 27 Some say 1 8 Ga others 2 5 See Kusky amp Li 2003 and Kusky Windley amp Zhai 2007 p 20 for details Kusky Windley amp Zhai 2007 p 3 a b Yang 2002a p 50 Kusky Windley amp Zhai 2007 p 20 See figure 16 in Zhu 2002 p 23 and figure 13 in Guo 2002 p 43 The secondary quake occurred on a north oriented section of a fault in a zone that coming from the southeast turns north and then gets complicated Guo 2002 pp 30 31 Wang et al 2006 p 757 Hammond 1976 Wang et al 2006 p 781 Wang et al 2006 p 777 a b Wang et al 2006 p 780 Kerr 1979 p 543 a b Xie amp Qu 2018 p 5 Lomnitz amp Lomnitz 1978 pp 109 110 Lomnitz amp Lomnitz 1978 p 109 mention the Lungling and Yenyuen earthquakes both accurately predicted See also Jennings 1980 p 6 and Chen amp Wang 2010 regarding the Sungpan Pingwu or Songpan earthquake Jennings 1980 p 6 Geller 1997 p 434 ICEF 2011 p 351 Scholz 1997 Wang et al 2006 p 785 See also Jennings 1980 pp 64 67 Jennings 1980 p 81 Bo 2010 Chapter 7 a b c d Bo 2010 p 281 a b Bo 2010 p 284 Chen amp Wang 2010 p 2844 Bo 2010 p 282 Bo 2010 p 283 Peng 2008 p 9 Chen amp Wang 2010 p 2847 Bo 2010 p 279 Bo 2010 p 286 Bo 2010 p 287 Chen amp Wang 2010 p 2846 Chen amp Wang 2010 p 2846 citing a Chinese source ICEF 2011 p 351 Xinhua News Agency 29 July 2017 The initial estimates of 600 000 to 750 000 deaths were based on a faulty comparison with the Shaanxi earthquake Spignesi 2005 pp 47 48 Hou et al 1998 p 549 Wang 2007 Wang Cui amp Liu 2002 p 757 See U S Geological Survey Significant Earthquakes Joint evaluation of the international response to the Indian Ocean tsunami Synthesis Report PDF TEC July 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 25 August 2006 Retrieved 9 July 2018 Earthquakes with 50 000 or More Deaths U S Geological Survey Archived from the original on 5 June 2013 Indian Ocean tsunami anniversary Memorial events held BBC News 26 December 2014 Retrieved 15 December 2016 https www cjr org behind the news one year later haitian earthqu php page all Columbia Journalism Review Two Years Later Haitian Earthquake Death Toll in Dispute 20 January 2012 Kolbe Athena R Hutson Royce A Shannon Harry Trzcinski Eileen Miles Bart Levitz Naomi Puccio Marie James Leah Roger Noel Jean Muggah Robert 2010 Mortality crime and access to basic needs before and after the Haiti earthquake a random survey of Port au Prince households Medicine Conflict and Survival 26 4 281 297 doi 10 1080 13623699 2010 535279 PMID 21314081 S2CID 26000167 Earthquakes with 50 000 or More Deaths Archived from the original on 5 June 2013 Retrieved 17 March 2012 U S Geological Survey Earthquakes with 50 000 or More Deaths Chen Na 21 December 2010 Death Toll of 1920 China Earthquake Higher than Previously Estimated Chinese Academy of Sciences Retrieved 22 September 2020 Most Destructive Known Earthquakes on Record in the World Earthquake usgs gov Archived from the original on 1 September 2009 Retrieved 26 October 2011 Dong amp Wang 2002 Qian amp Zhu 2002 Wang Cui amp Liu 2002 p 748 Shen 2002 Wang Cui amp Liu 2002 Watch Days of Fury 1979 on the Internet Archive 1979 Sources editANSS Sichuan 1976 Comprehensive Catalog U S Geological Survey Bo Zhiyue 2010 Chapter 7 Sichuan Earthquake China s Elite Politics Governance and Democratization Series on Contempoary China vol 19 ISBN 978 981 283 672 4 Butler Rhett Stewart Gordon S Kanamori Hiroo February 1979 The July 27 1976 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Kentucky pp 417 431 ISBN 978 0 8131 6730 5 Liao Shuqiao Gu Zuoqin 2002 Damage to Railway Engineering PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 1 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 1 59 林 Lin 泉 Quan 1982 地球的震撼 The Earth s Shock in Chinese Beijing China 中国地震出版社 Seismological Press Lomnitz Cinna Lomnitz Larissa 12 January 1978 Tangshan 1976 a case history in earthquake prediction Nature 271 5641 109 111 Bibcode 1978Natur 271 109L doi 10 1038 271109a0 Malcolm Andrew H 2 June 1977 Chinese Disclose That 1976 Quake Was Deadliest in Four Centuries New York Times p 1 Mao Yingsheng Liang ZhiJiang Cui Fuwen 2002 Lightly Damaged Bridges in the High Intensity Earthquake Zone in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 3 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 231 242 Mi Enli 2002 The Repair and Restoration of the Kailuan Coal Mine PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 3 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 747 764 Palmer James 2012 Heaven Cracks Earth Shakes The Tangshan Earthquake and the Death of Mao s China Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 01478 1 Southern Liaoning Results of earthquake prediction and forecasting PDF Peking Review vol 18 no 12 pp 20 21 21 March 1975Pelling Mark Dill Kathleen 2006 Natural Disasters as Catalysts of Political Action PDF Burmalibrary org ISP NSC Briefing paper Peng Funan June 2008 The success of the prediction of Haicheng earthquake and the negligence of the Tangshan earthquake Engineering Sciences 6 2 9 18 archived from the original on 5 August 2018 retrieved 5 August 2018 Press Frank Bullock Mary Hamilton Robert M Brace William F Kisslinger Carl Bonilla Manuel G Allen Clarence C Sykes Lynn R Raleigh C Barry Knopoff Leon Clough Ray W Hofheinz Roy 1975 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1976 vol 3 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 819 822 Spence Jonathan 1991 The Search for Modern China W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 30780 1 Spignesi Stephen J 2005 Chapter 15 The 1976 Tangshan China Earthquake Catastrophe The 100 Greatest Disasters of All Time Citadel Press ISBN 978 0 8065 2558 7 State Council Document No 69 29 June 1974 archived from the original on 21 April 2010 retrieved 21 March 2011 Stoltman Joseph P Lidstone John Dechano M Lisa 2004 International Perspectives on Natural Disasters Springer Publishing ISBN 978 1 4020 2850 2 Wang Kelin Chen Qi Fu Sun Shihong Wang Andong June 2006 Predicting the 1975 Haicheng Earthquake PDF Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 96 3 757 795 Bibcode 2006BuSSA 96 757W doi 10 1785 0120050191 Wang Ru diao February 2007 Questioning about that 830 Thousand People Died in the 1556 Huaxian Earthquake Earthquake Research in Shanxi 2 42 46 ISSN 1000 6265 archived from the original on 6 December 2018 retrieved 5 December 2018 Wang Zixing Cui Xifu Liu Keren 2002 Disaster Relief After the Tangshan Earthquake PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 3 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 747 764 Whitham K Berry M J Heidebrecht A C Kanasewich E R Milne W G 1976 Earthquake Prediction in China Geoscience Canada 3 4 96 263 268 Xie Lili Qu Zhe January 2018 On civil engineering disasters and their mitigation PDF Earthquake Engineering and Engineering Vibration 17 1 1 10 Bibcode 2018EEEV 17 1X doi 10 1007 s11803 018 0420 6 S2CID 116230669 Xiao Yuefan October 2013 The Politics of Crisis Management in China dissertation PDF Xing Jiaming Zou Baoshan 2002 Geomorphologic Characteristics in the Beijing Tianjin Tangshan Area and Their Relation with Tectonic Activity PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 1 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 85 98 唐山地震纪念墙上的新名字 每个名字 都是一块墓碑 The new name on the Tangshan earthquake memorial wall each name is a tombstone in Chinese Xinhua News Agency 29 July 2017 archived from the original on 7 February 2019 retrieved 27 February 2019Xu Wei 2002 Earthquake Intensity Distribution in the City of Beijing PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 1 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 241 243 Yang Lihua 2002a Geologic Tectonic Background and Seismogenic Structure of the Tangshan Earthquake PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 1 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 85 98 Yang Lihua 2002b Distribution and Ground Failure Intensity Distribution of the Tangshan Earthquake PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 1 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 171 183 Yao Binghua 2002 Earthquake Damage Distribution in the City of Beijing PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 1 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 244 248 Yeoh Emile Kok Kheng October 2010 Changing China Three Decades of Social Transformation International Journal of China Studies 1 2 239 308 ISSN 2180 3250 Zhao Yucheng 2002 Earthquake Damage to Shafts and Roadways in Kailuan PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 2 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 625 645 Zhu Chuanzhen 2002 Seismic Activity in Tangshan and its Surrounding Areas PDF in Housner George W He Duxin eds The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 vol 1 Pasadena California Earthquake Engineering Research Laboratory California Institute of Technology pp 1 23 Liu Zhen 12 July 2020 Chinese city of Tangshan hit by magnitude 5 1 quake stirring memories of 1976 tragedy South China Morning Post retrieved 11 October 2020 Chen Yuxuan Liu Mian Wang Hui 2021 Aftershocks and Background Seismicity in Tangshan and the Rest of North China Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth 126 5 625 645 Bibcode 2021JGRB 12621395C doi 10 1029 2020JB021395 S2CID 234848679 Further reading editQian Gang The Great China Earthquake Beijing Foreign Languages Press 1989 ISBN 0835122271 James Palmer Heaven Cracks Earth Shakes The Tangshan Earthquake and the Death of Mao s China New York Basic Books 2011 ISBN 978 0 465 01478 1 hardcover alk paper 9780465023493 ebk alk paper Report on The Great Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 English translation of an extensive Chinese report from 1986 Knotts Joey 5 December 2019 Beijing Tremors a Ghostly Reminder of Catastrophic 1976 Tangshan Quake The Beijinger External links edit Integration of Public Administration and Earthquake Science The Best Practice Case of Qinglong County at GlobalWatch org The International Seismological Centre has a bibliography and or authoritative data for this event An isoseismal map showing the different zones of shaking intensity of the Tangshan earthquake can be found here Archived 28 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1976 Tangshan earthquake amp oldid 1188229872, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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