Can earthquakes damage Earth?
Earthquakes can permanently crack the Earth, a study of quakes that have rocked Chile over the past million years has suggested.
Previous research has found that Earth mostly rebounds after quakes, with blocks of the world’s crust elastically springing back, over the course of months to decades, to the way they initially were. Such rebounding was first seen after investigations of the devastating 1906 San Francisco temblor that caused destruction of more than 80 per cent of the city, OurAmazingPlanet.Com reported.
The rebound is well-documented now by satellite-based Global Positioning System (GPS) systems that monitor Earth’s movements. However, structural geologist Richard Allmen-dinger of Cornell University and his colleagues in the new study found that major earthquakes of magnitude 7 or greater apparently caused the crust in northern Chile to crack permanently.
“My graduate students and I originally went to northern Chile to study other features. While we were there, our Chilean colleague, Professor Gabriel Gonzalez of the Universidad Catolica del Norte, took us to a region where these cracks were particularly well-exposed,” Allmendinger told the website.
They discovered that a small but significant 1 to 10 per cent of the deformation of the Earth caused by 2,000 to 9,000 major quakes over the past 8,00,000 to 1 million years was permanent, involving cracks millimetres to meters large in the crust of the Atacama Desert.
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