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1923 Renda earthquake

Coordinates: 31°17′42″N 100°45′00″E / 31.295°N 100.750°E / 31.295; 100.750
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1923 Renda earthquake
1923 Renda earthquake is located in Sichuan
1923 Renda earthquake
UTC time1923-03-24 12:40:17
ISC event911322
USGS-ANSSComCat
Local dateMarch 24, 1923
Local time20:40:06 CST
MagnitudeMs 7.3[1]
Depth15 km
Epicenter31°17′42″N 100°45′00″E / 31.295°N 100.750°E / 31.295; 100.750
FaultXianshuihe fault system
TypeStrike-slip
Areas affectedSichuan, China
Max. intensityCSIS X

MMI X (Extreme)
LandslidesYes
Casualties4,800 dead

The 1923 Renda earthquake occurred on March 24 at 20:40 local time between the counties of Daofu and Luhuo in Sichuan, China. The estimated Ms 7.3 earthquake was assigned a maximum modified Mercalli intensity scale rating of X (Extreme). Severe damage occurred in Sichuan, killing an estimated 4,800 people.

Tectonic setting

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Western Sichuan is situated at the edge of the Tibetan Plateau in a vast zone of complex continental deformation caused by the collision of the Indian Plate with the Eurasian Plate. As the thrusting of the Indian Plate beneath the Eurasian Plate along the Himalayas continues, the continental crust within the Eurasian Plate is actively uplifted and thickened, forming the Tibetan Plateau. As there are no active thrust structures within the plateau, compression is accommodated by strike-slip motion along large structures including the Altyn Tagh Fault, Kunlun Fault, Haiyuan Fault and Xianshuihe fault system. Left-lateral strike-slip motion squeezes the crustal blocks of the Tibetan Plateau outwards, forcing it to move eastwards. Meanwhile, the strike-slip motion also results in east–west extension of the plateau, causing normal faults to break within the thickened crust.[2][3]

Earthquake

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The Xianshuihe fault system is a 1,400-km-long active left-lateral strike-slip fault that accommodate the strike-slip motion in the Tibetan Plateau. The fault is one of the largest active intracontinental geological structure in the world. Beginning in 1893, at least 350 km of the fault length has ruptured in large successive earthquakes with magnitudes 6.5 or larger.[4] Going back to the year 1700 to present-day, the fault has ruptured its entire 1,400 km length during large earthquakes.[5]

A 60-kilometer-long surface rupture formed after the earthquake between Daofu and Renda. The immediate region around the surface rupture was also the meizoseismal area where the maximum intensity was X. The northwest extent of the rupture overlaps the eventual southeastern rupture zone of the 1973 Luhuo earthquake. Meanwhile, the farthest southeast rupture overlaps the northwest rupture extent of the 1981 Dawu earthquake. A maximum coseismic slip of 3.3 meters was measured near the village of Dazhai, while the average slip across the rupture was 3.0 meters. Coulomb stress transfer may have increased strain on the segment north of the 1923 earthquake rupture, causing it to fail during the 1973 earthquake.[1]

Damage

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In Luhuo county, the city's defensive walls toppled to the ground. Many homes, official buildings, and places of worship were totally destroyed. Avalanches and landslides occurred on the mountains. Fissures measuring up to 2 meters across appeared in the ground. The death toll is in excess of 3,000 people.[6]

Two villages in Dawu county were razed to the ground; none left standing. An estimated 500 people were killed in the county. Several residents died in Qianning while many homes and schools were lost. At Kangding, at least 1,300 people died during a severe rockfall. Many temples suffered partial collapses whils poorly-constructed homes were destroyed. Damage to homes was also reported in Garzê Town, Xinlong and Litang.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Yang Jianbing; Zhao Bin; Du Ruilin; Yu Jiansheng; Wang Dongzhen (2020). "1923年仁达地震与1973年炉霍地震的破裂模型及触发关系研究" [Research on the Rupture Model and Trigger Relationship of Renda Earthquake in 1923 and Luhuo Earthquake in 1973]. Geodesy and Geodynamics (in Chinese). 40 (8): 783–789. doi:10.14075/j.jgg.2020.08.003.
  2. ^ Elliott, J. R.; Walters, R. J.; England, P. C.; Jackson, J. A.; Li, Z.; Parsons, B. (2010). "Extension on the Tibetan plateau: recent normal faulting measured by InSAR and body wave seismology". Geophysical Journal International. 183 (2): 503–535. Bibcode:2010GeoJI.183..503E. doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.2010.04754.x. S2CID 134590278.
  3. ^ Weijun Gan; Peizhen Zhang; Zheng-Kang Shen; Zhijun Niu; Min Wang; Yongge Wan; Demin Zhou; Jia Cheng (2007). "Present-day crustal motion within the Tibetan Plateau inferred from GPS measurements". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 112 (B8). American Geophysical Union. Bibcode:2007JGRB..112.8416G. doi:10.1029/2005JB004120.
  4. ^ Eleftheria Papadimitriou; Xueze Wen; Vassilios Karakostas; Xueshen Jin (2004). "Earthquake Triggering along the Xianshuihe Fault Zone of Western Sichuan, China". Pure and Applied Geophysics. 161 (8): 1683–1707. Bibcode:2004PApGe.161.1683P. doi:10.1007/s00024-003-2471-4. S2CID 129325246.
  5. ^ Mingkun Bai; Marie-Luce Chevalier; Jiawei Pan; Anne Replumaz; Philippe Hervé Leloup; Marianne Métois; Haibing Li (2018). "Southeastward increase of the late Quaternary slip-rate of the Xianshuihe fault, eastern Tibet. Geodynamic and seismic hazard implications". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 485: 19–31. Bibcode:2018E&PSL.485...19B. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2017.12.045.
  6. ^ a b "Significant Earthquake Information". ngdc.noaa.gov. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
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