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China Earthquake
http://cheesepeople.co.uk/articles/270/1/China-Earthquake/Page1.html
World News

 

 
By World News
Published on Tuesday 13th 2008
 

China's people are in trouble - Thousands trapped in rubble.....


The worst quake for 30 years
Thousands are trapped under rubble, and rescuers are having trouble,
trying to get to those alive.
Hundreds crushed by large stones, smashing, breaking fragile bones,
it's unlikely many will survive.

The quake measured 7.9, the worst China has had for a long time,
and it's difficult getting to those in need.
Ten thousand estimated as dead, but local agencies have said,
the number is likely to be a lot higher indeed.


Earthquake facts and information
An earthquake is a sudden movement of the earth's crust caused by the release of stress accumulated along geologic faults or by volcanic activity.

Some 80 percent of all the planet's earthquakes occur along the rim of the Pacific Ocean, called the "Ring of Fire" because of the amount of volcanic activity there. Most earthquakes occur at fault zones, where tectonic plates; giant rock slabs that make up the Earth's upper layer; collide or slide against each other. These impacts are usually gradual and unnoticeable on the surface. However, immense stress can build up between plates. When this stress is released quickly, it sends massive vibrations, called seismic waves, often hundreds of miles through the rock and up to the surface. Other quakes can occur far from faults zones when plates are stretched or squeezed.

Scientists assign a magnitude rating to earthquakes based on the strength and duration of their seismic waves. A quake measuring 3 to 5 would be considered minor or light; 5 to 7 is moderate to strong; 7 to 8 is major, and 8 or more is great.

On average, a magnitude 8 quake strikes somewhere every year and some 10,000 people die worldwide annually in earthquakes. Collapsing buildings claim by far the majority of lives, but the destruction is often compounded by mud slides, fires, floods, or tsunamis. Smaller temblors that usually occur in the days following a large earthquake can complicate rescue efforts and cause further death and destruction.


USA earthquake statistic
THE TEN WORST EARTHQUAKES IN TERMS OF VICTIMS




Rank

Victims

Date

Event/Magnitude (2)

Place
1 255,000 1976 Earthquake (M 7.5) China
2 220,000 2004 Earthquake (Mw 9.0), tsunami in Indian Ocean Indonesia, Thailand, et al 
3 73,300 2005 Earthquake (Mw 7.6); aftershocks, landslides, floods Pakistan, India, et al
4 66,000 1970 Earthquake (M 7.7); rock slides  Peru
5 50,000 1990 Earthquake (M 7.7); landslides Iran
6 26,271 2003 Earthquake (M 6.5)  Iran
7 25,000 1978 Earthquake (M 7.7) in Tabas Iran
8 25,000 1988 Earthquake (M 6.9) Armenia, ex "USSR"
9 22,084 1976 Earthquake (M 7.5) Guatemala
10 19,118 1999 Earthquake (M 7.0) Turkey 

(1) Based on Swiss Re list of deadliest catastrophes, 1970-2005.
(2) M is general magnitude that indicates the strength of an earthquake at its epicentre. Mw measures the total energy released by an earthquake and is proportional to the size of the fracture surface and the displacement. The Richter magnitude ML is the maximum amplitude of the ground motion signal recorded on a standarized seismograph.

Source: Swiss Re, sigma, No. 2/2006.