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Tsunami concern for Bay of Bengal
Friday, 7 September 2007 - 3:26 AM SL Time

The northern end of the Bay of Bengal could be at risk of giant earthquakes and tsunamis in the coming decades, an Australian study concludes.

Such events have been thought unlikely there, in contrast to the area further south where the 2004 tsunami began.

But the new work, published in the journal Nature, has found `compelling evidence` for tsunami-triggering earthquake activity to the north.

Geologists have said this warning should be taken `very seriously`.

The area is densely populated, and more than a million of people could potentially be at risk.

Releasing pressure

The magnitude 9.2 earthquake that struck off the Sumatran coast on 26 December 2004 and the tsunami it generated killed thousands of people and left millions homeless.

It stemmed from a geological area known as a `subduction zone`.

Here, part of the Indian/Australian tectonic plate was slowly burrowing beneath a component of the Eurasian plate.

This created stresses in the upper plate, which were violently released in the form of a `locked-thrust fault` earthquake as it sprung back up, which in turn triggered the tsunami.

Since then, another stress point has been identified to the east of the 2004 epicentre, but the subduction zone further north along the Myanmar coast was thought to be of little concern.

But Phil Cummins, lead author on the Nature paper and a geologist at Geoscience Australia, believes this is not the case.

He said: `I reviewed the geological literature and found the evidence for a lack of tectonic activity along the Myanmar coast was not compelling.`

Historical evidence

Recent GPS data, he said, suggested that the plate boundary was at sea in this area, hidden below thick layers of sediment.

Dr Cummins said: `Although these GPS measurements are sparse, these show that there is active deformation near the Myanmar coast that is consistent with a locked thrust-fault offshore, which is the type needed to generate tsunami.`

The geologist also looked at accounts of an earthquake that occurred in the area in 1762, which wrenched up parts of the coast by between 3-7m.

His computer simulation of the quake, which he believes would have measured magnitude 8.8, showed that a similar event today would have significant impacts.

`Such an earthquake would generate a large tsunami that could have a pronounced impact on the Chittagong coast and the Ganges delta,` he said.

`The latter region is home to 60 million people living within just 10m of sea level.`

Meanwhile the quake itself could cause major damage to the region`s largest cities, Calcutta and Dhaka. Overall, the simulation suggested that more than a million lives could be at risk.

`Alarming message`

Professor Richard Arculus, from Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra, said: `Phil Cummins` warnings should be taken very seriously.

`A few months before the devastating earthquake and accompanying tsunami triggered off northern Sumatra in late 2004, Phil Cummins published a perceptive analysis of historic events of this nature in the region.

He warned that countries bordering the Indian Ocean, including the northern coast of Australia, were at significant risk, and the lack of a tsunami warning system analogous to that deployed in the Pacific was a serious issue.

`So his credibility with respect to tsunamigenic earthquakes is established. `

Kevin McCue, a professor at Central Queensland University (CQU), added: `The message is alarming, perhaps justifiably, given the unexpected disaster that followed the great Sumatran earthquake and tsunami of 2004, a disaster of local, regional and global reach.`

But he added: `Disaster planners might need more information than is given in the paper, particularly some quantitative measure of uncertainties in the science.`

Phil Cummins agrees that more work is needed to confirm his analysis, and suggests this should take place before any drastic mitigation measures are considered.

Source(s)
bbc

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groovygirl
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6 Sep 2007 20:32:28 GMT  Report for Abuse   
The northern end of the Bay of Bengal could be at risk of giant earthquakes and tsunamis in the coming decades, an Australian study concludes.


That could be scary...:((
I hope Sri Lanka and other countries are prepared and have a Disaster Recovery Plan.
Revy
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6 Sep 2007 20:50:26 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Another good piece from Nature eh, guess we are reading the same articles today mate :):)
JRJayawardena
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6 Sep 2007 20:50:50 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Hon,

I hope Sri Lanka and other countries are prepared and have a Disaster Recovery Plan.


In fact one learned Professor has predicted that both N and E could be submerged by the water in 40 years time which would make the country less of N & E. so I wonder whether this fight for a separate land would be worth that much.

I think people have to be educated than just coverings on floods etc. Global warming has huge impacts and the rising sea levels and increase CO2 would definitely bring more rains and extreme weathers which would have unpredictable weather patterns.

The question is are we really ready for that or just fight for a piece of land till then? I think these factors have to be addressed dear with caution and care, than opportunist political mileage.

JRJayawardena
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6 Sep 2007 20:56:25 GMT  Report for Abuse   
guess we are reading the same articles today mate :):)


Great minds think alike mate :)

Remember once both Revy and JRJ happened to be one person? Who said that cannot remember the dude's handle.

Thats funny mate.

JRJ
Revy
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6 Sep 2007 21:07:33 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Remember once both Revy and JRJ happened to be one person? Who said that cannot remember the dude's handle.


haha yeah I had forgotten that episode, was quite hilarious :):)

Don't remeber the handle either...but guess I better stop posting to myself now LOL :):)

Edited By - Revy - 6 Sep 2007 21:08:22 GMT
Revy
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6 Sep 2007 21:10:13 GMT  Report for Abuse   
In fact one learned Professor has predicted that both N and E could be submerged by the water in 40 years time which would make the country less of N & E.


Well if we could sort this out soon we can take action such as Singapore is already doing, they too have many areas that are less than 10m above sea level and so they are already making plans for those eventualities.
Saint
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6 Sep 2007 21:14:51 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Alarming!

Sad reality, this region is one of the world's poorest and any cataclysm will devastate the marginally surviving inhabitants.
:-(
JRJayawardena
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6 Sep 2007 21:25:24 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Machang,

Sad reality, this region is one of the world's poorest and any cataclysm will devastate the marginally surviving inhabitants.
:-(


Bangladesh is one of the known countries to get affected by any sort of extreme weathers and it remains the same. I am not an astrologer but could that be due to Karma? Your comment is valued.

Revy,

Lets see a plausible programme to make sense out of this madness of separation and killing each other mate. I feel very sickly to see one killing another just because of the land and want to be separated.

Btw, I think that dude was a bloke called PeterRoberts, remember? :))

JRJ
Saint
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6 Sep 2007 21:33:36 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Machan!

I think it must be, in my life I witnessed one very strong incident, where there was no other explanation.

I will let you know through personal channel what exactly happened.
Edited By - Saint - 6 Sep 2007 21:48:32 GMT
samadi
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6 Sep 2007 22:31:58 GMT  Report for Abuse   

JRJ,

Lets see a plausible programme to make sense out of this madness of separation and killing each other mate. I feel very sickly to see one killing another just because of the land and want to be separated.


I was bringing up this 'fact' several times...but all fell to deaf ears..

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