Special
report: Reconstruction After
Earthquake
BEIJING, Sept. 4 -- More magnitude-5 or stronger earthquakes have rocked
China this year than in any other year, a senior seismologist said
yesterday.
An average of 18 such quakes strike China each year. But 21 quakes,
including the one that devastated Sichuan province on May 12, have struck in
just eight months of this year, Yin Chaomin, deputy director of China Earthquake
Administration (CEA), said.
Speaking at a joint briefing of the CEA and the State Bureau of Surveying
and Mapping (SBSM), he said the tremors that rocked Xinjiang, Tibet and the
Sichuan-Yunnan border region were caused partly by the May 12 quake. Part of the
cause, of course, is their geographical locations on seismic belts.
The Wenchuan quake, however, had nothing to do with the tremor that jolted
Panzhihua in southern Sichuan on Saturday, said Liu Jie, China National
Seismological Network director in charge of earthquake forecasting.
Addressing another briefing, Liu said the epicenters of the two quakes,
which occurred in different fault zones, were 550 km apart.
The Wenchuan quake caused a horizontal displacement of 238 cm and ground
shifts of up to 70 cm, Li Weisen, SBSM deputy director, said.
The displacements were observed in southern Shaanxi and Longnan region of
Gansu province during a CEA-SBSM joint field study between late May and
mid-July, Li said.
Two- to 3-cm horizontal and vertical displacements were also observed on
the southwestern foot of Mt Qomolangma in Nepal, he said.
"Results showed the May 12 quake had a considerable impact on the terrain
of the quake zones, but not much in the areas beyond. Surveying and mapping
infrastructure in the quake zones was severely impaired, whereas those outside
the area suffered only minor damage."
Li rubbished some reports that said the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau had shifted
several meters. "Media reports that claim the plateau shifted several meters
because of the Wenchuan earthquake lack scientific evidence," he said.
The CEA is positioning more than 50 GPS monitoring stations in the quake
zones where earlier surveying and mapping results are being re-examined.
China has suffered eight magnitude-6 or above aftershocks since the May 12
quake, Yin said. The number of magnitude-5 or stronger tremors is more than 30.
(Source: China Daily)