1941 Jabal Razih earthquake explained

1941 Jabal Razih earthquake
Timestamp:1941-01-11 08:31:48
Isc-Event:900618
Anss-Url:iscgem900618
Magnitude:5.8–6.5
Depth:35.0 km
Aftershocks:5.8 & 5.2
Location:16.4°N 43.5°W
Countries Affected:Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen
Casualties:1,200 dead
200 injured

The 1941 Sa'dah earthquake or the Jabal Razih earthquake occurred on January 11 in Razih District of the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen. The earthquake had a surface-wave magnitude of 5.8–6.5 and a shallow focal depth.[1] [2] Despite the moderate size of this earthquake, an estimated 1,200 people perished and at least 200 injured.[3] With a maximum MSK-64 intensity assigned at VIII, it destroyed many villages and collapsed homes in the region of North Yemen.[4]

Tectonic setting

Western Yemen is located near the southwestern point of the Arabian Plate. At this location lies the Afar Triple Junction, where it meets the Nubian and Somali plates at three divergent boundaries. The three plates are rifting apart; extensional tectonics stretch the plates and eventually form new oceanic crust, in the case of the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea, where active rifting is ongoing. The extension causes normal faulting to break within the crust and cause earthquakes.

The most recent major seismic activity related to the regional tectonics were a series of six magnitude 6.0+ earthquakes in Djibouti and Ethiopia in 1989. The largest shock had a moment magnitude of 6.5 and resulted in two deaths.[5]

Foreshocks

The earthquake was preceded by slight foreshocks that began days before the mainshock struck. A damaging foreshock occurred at noon on January 9, causing destruction in Al Hudaydah.

Damage

The mainshock occurred at mid-day with an estimated surface-wave magnitude of between 5.8 and 6.2 while some estimates suggests it was up to 6.5. This strong earthquake was felt in the Al Darb governorate of neighboring Saudi Arabia and as far as Assab in present-day Eritrea, then part of Ethiopia.In all, a total of 1,200 people were killed and some 1,700 homes were lost.[6] Another 400 homes suffered damage so serious, they had to be demolished.

Aftershocks

Many aftershocks were felt every day up until the second week of March.[7] These aftershocks worsened the damage caused by the mainshock. Two large aftershocks occurred at 09:18 on 4 February and at 19:03 on 23 February. The first aftershock had a magnitude of 5.2 and was reported from Haidan, Khaulan, al-Zahir, and Wadi al-'Abidin near Sa'da, causing landslides. Damage was also reported from Abu Arish and Sabiya to the northwest and Harad to the southwest. The second aftershock of 23 February was reported from al-Hudaida, Bait al-Faqih, al-Sa'id, and Bura, and caused significant damage.

See also

Notes and References

  1. N. N. Ambraseys . C. P. Melville . Seismicity of Yemen . Nature . 1983 . 303 . 5915 . 321–323 . 10.1038/303321a0 . 1983Natur.303..321A . 4337703 . 17 July 2021.
  2. Web site: ISC: On-Line Bulletin . International Seismological Centre Online Event Bibliography . International Seismological Centre . 17 July 2021.
  3. Web site: Significant Earthquake Information . ngdc.noaa.gov . NCEI . 17 July 2021.
  4. P.C. Thenhaus . Sylvester Theodore Algermissen . D.M. Perkins . S.L. Hanson . W.H. Diment . Probabilistic estimates of the seismic ground-motion hazard in western Saudi Arabia . U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin . 1989 . 1868 . 10.3133/b1868 . 17 July 2021 . U.S. Geological Survey Federal Center. 2027/msu.31293017316617 . free .
  5. Web site: M 6.5 - 12 km ENE of Gâlâfi, Djibouti . earthquake.usgs.gov . USGS . 17 July 2021.
  6. Rakesh Mohindra . Yamaoka Koshun . Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analysis for Yemen . International Journal of Geophysics . 2012 . 2012 . 1–14 . 10.1155/2012/304235 . free .
  7. Book: . . Richard D. Adams . The Seismicity of Egypt, Arabia and the Red Sea: A Historical Review . 2005 . Cambridge University Press . 9780521020251 . 204.