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The M9.0 Andaman Islands-Sumatra Earthquake and Tsunami of 26 December 2004

The M9.0 Andaman Islands-Sumatra Earthquake and Tsunami of 26 December 2004 L. Braile, Purdue University braile@purdue.edu , www.eas.purdue.edu/~braile Tectonic Setting Schematic plate tectonic setting for tsunami generation NOAA Historical Seismicity

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The M9.0 Andaman Islands-Sumatra Earthquake and Tsunami of 26 December 2004

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  1. The M9.0 Andaman Islands-Sumatra Earthquake and Tsunami of 26 December 2004 L. Braile, Purdue Universitybraile@purdue.edu, www.eas.purdue.edu/~braile

  2. Tectonic Setting

  3. Schematic plate tectonic setting for tsunami generation NOAA

  4. Historical Seismicity (Indonesia is one of the most seismically active areas in the world, has a long subduction zone plate boundary, and many 7+ earthquakes have occurred there in the past, so it should be no surprise that an M9+ tsunami-generating event would occur there.)

  5. Sumatra earthquakes FAQs Question: What other great (M > 8) earthquakes have occurred in the region? Answer: Since 1900 and prior to the December 26 earthquake, the largest earthquake along the subduction zone from southern Sumatra to the Andaman Islands occurred in 2000 and had a magnitude of 7.9.  A magnitude 8.4 earthquake occurred in 1797, a magnitude 8.5 in 1861 and a magnitude 8.7 in 1833 . All three ruptured sections of the subduction zone to the south of the recent earthquake.  Interestingly, the 1797 and 1833 quakes are believed to have ruptured roughly the same area with only 36 years separating the events. Paleoseismic evidence shows that great earthquakes or earthquake couplets occur about every 230 years (http://www.gps.caltech.edu/~sieh/publications/a10.html). USGS

  6. Main shock and aftershocks ~1200 km of the plate boundary moved, max. displacement ~ 20 m (?, preliminary est.)

  7. Question: What other significant tsunamis have occurred in the region? Answer: The following destructive tsunamis are listed on a data base maintained by the Tsunami Laboratory, Institute of Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Geophysics (http://tsun.sscc.ru/tsulab/20041226tsun.htm) 1. 1797/02/10 Central part of the western Sumatra. The quake was most felt near Padang and in the area within +/-2 deg of equator. Padang was flooded by powerful waves. More then 300 fatalities. 2. 1833/11/24 South coast of the western Sumatra, estimated rupture from 1 S to 6 S latitude. Huge tidal wave flooded all southern part of the western Sumatra. Numerous victims. 3. 1843/01/05 Strong earthquake west of the central Sumatra. Terrible wave came from the south-east and flooded all the coast of the Nias Island. Many fatalities. 4.  1861/02/16 Exceptionally strong earthquake affected all the western coast of Sumatra. Several thousand fatalities. 5. 1883 Krakatau explosion 36,000 fatalities USGS

  8. 24-hour seismograph record ~135 degrees distance

  9. Seismogram

  10. Worldwide earthquakes per year (from USGS):

  11. Worldwide earthquakes per year: Frequency-magnitude relationship suggests that magnitude 9+ events will occur about once per decade; statistically, since 1900, the actual number is ~once per 20 years.

  12. Largest earthquakes, 1900 - 2004 USGS

  13. Largest earthquakes, 1900 - 2004 USGS

  14. Some recent Tsunami NOAA

  15. Tsunami travel time (hours; simulation) NOAA

  16. Tsunami wave height (cm; simulation) NOAA

  17. Tsunami wave propagation characteristics – note that as water depth becomes smaller, waves slow down, become shorter wavelength, and have larger amplitude NOAA When the water is 10 m deep, what is the separation of the waves in minutes?

  18. Tsunami simulation http://staff.aist.go.jp/kenji.satake/animation.gif

  19. Tsunami simulation Open Quick Time simulation (see these websites) http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/tsunami/ http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/tsunami/Mov/TITOV-INDO2004.mov Note distance of propagation and reflection of waves NOAA

  20. Double click on the file: TITOV-INDO2004[1].mov To view Quick Time movie of Tsunami simulation from NOAA

  21. DART tsunami warning system NOAA

  22. Commonly, the water recedes (a wave trough) significantly for a few minutes before the first wave crest arrives. People often go out to explore the beach at that time.

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