1983 Biga earthquake explained

1983 Biga earthquake
Timestamp:1983-07-05 12:01:30
Isc-Event:571502
Anss-Url:iscgem571502
Local-Time:15:01:30 EEST
Depth:10 km
Type:Strike-slip
Location:40.324°N 27.222°W[1]
Magnitude:6.1
Countries Affected:Turkey
Biga
Landslide:Yes
Casualties:5 dead, 30 injured

The 1983 Biga earthquake hit northwestern Turkey on 5 July 1983. It measured 6.1 on the surface wave magnitude scale and was felt as far away as eastern Greece. The United States Geological Survey listed the earthquake among the "Significant Earthquakes of the World" for 1983.[2]

Geology

The Biga Peninsula is an area marked by active faults including strike-slip movement and en echelon divergent basins.

The earthquake was preceded by a foreshock nearly a year prior, and was followed by aftershock clusters.

Damage

Five people died[2] and 30 were injured. Several houses collapsed, an additional 85 damaged, water mains broke and windows shattered.[3] [4] Among the dead was a farmer who was crushed by a collapsing roof.[5] It also caused panic as far away as Istanbul and in eastern Greece. In Istanbul, there was some damage and people fled onto the streets.[3] [2]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Comments for the Significant Earthquake. NGDC. 27 August 2010.
  2. Web site: Significant Earthquakes of the World, 1983. United States Geological Survey. 5 January 2010. 5 July 2010.
  3. News: 30 hurt in Turkish quake. 2023-07-08 . . 1 .
  4. News: 110 yılda 56 büyük deprem. 2023-07-08 . 2014-05-24 . . tr .
  5. News: Quake toll up. 2023-07-08 . . 2 .