Nepal, 25/04/2015: Earthquake Magnitude 7.9
It was after about half an hour later that our phones started working again. We contacted our homes and were relieved to know that they were all safe. I rang my niece in Sikkim. She was safe too. People who live in high rises were struck terribly. Utterly shocked and distressed, it took them some time to come down. Besides, the towers were wavering - moving forth and moving back. It was horrific. To top that the sky started down pouring. People were distressed, horrified, drenched and were all on road.
Since the last few days my evening strolls were cut short by erratic show of thunderous silver lines in the sky. The lightnings, rumblings and the rains. Then, yesterday, I was watching the horrific pictures of fresh volcanoes in Chile and today this earthquake. Something very serious is going on inside our earth and we have earned this like we do most accidents. The hot lava twirlings the untimely shudders and the break outs deep down the earth - I can only wish that people stay safe and stay together.
At about 11-30 am today, Nepal and the Sub-Himalayan belt are hit by a horrific earthquake. An earthquake that most certainly would be considered as one of the century's tragic demolitions of mankind and history. This was also the third and the worst conceivable earthquakes that I have experienced ever.
I was in the office, sat comfortably doing my usual thing when I realized that something not quite right was happening. I felt lightheaded, dizzy and indescribably hollow. Was about to attribute it to my skipping breakfast thing when I noticed that the mirror and the towel in the ring were swaying unusually. It went on for about 10 seconds. I was still confused when I heard someone screaming, 'it's an earthquake, it's an earthquake'. By then everyone had left their desks and started to move out. Though late, my boss and I headed towards the portico with our phones on trying to reach our homes. People were panicked to death. The patients in wheelchairs who came down for investigations could not figure out what was happening. Unnerved and dazed, I realized that our phones were not working.
It was after about half an hour later that our phones started working again. We contacted our homes and were relieved to know that they were all safe. I rang my niece in Sikkim. She was safe too. People who live in high rises were struck terribly. Utterly shocked and distressed, it took them some time to come down. Besides, the towers were wavering - moving forth and moving back. It was horrific. To top that the sky started down pouring. People were distressed, horrified, drenched and were all on road.
Later in the evening, I came back home to a bitter reality. Nepal met with a deadly shudder killing thousands of people and leaving several more on the roads. Makeshifts tarpaulin tents were everywhere to accommodate as many people as possible. People digging rubble to pull out bodies and looking for beating lives. Then the rains started pelting and an avalanche set off in the Himalayas. It was testing time for Nepal.
It was so unnerving to see Nepal in limbo. I am shattered to see the destruction of several century old revered monuments. The quake has left a dismal remnants of the history. People were still stuck in the rubble and as the army and the people try to rescue them, I, sitting not so far away, pinch myself. It could have been me!
Since the last few days my evening strolls were cut short by erratic show of thunderous silver lines in the sky. The lightnings, rumblings and the rains. Then, yesterday, I was watching the horrific pictures of fresh volcanoes in Chile and today this earthquake. Something very serious is going on inside our earth and we have earned this like we do most accidents. The hot lava twirlings the untimely shudders and the break outs deep down the earth - I can only wish that people stay safe and stay together.
The factual details:
-7.9 magnitude earthquake struck Nepal and areas of India, China on 15.04.2015, Saturday
killing nearly 2,000 people in Nepal alone.
-The quake struck at 11:56 a.m. local time (2:11 a.m. ET) and was
centered less than 50 miles northwest of Kathmandu. It occurred at a
depth of 9.3 miles, which is considered shallow and more damaging than a
deeper quake.
-The earthquake triggered a deadly avalanche on Mount Everest killing at least 17 people.
-About 35 aftershocks highest reaching 5.5 magnitude followed.
But what I read in NYtimes is very striking. Kenneth Chang say that this was inevitable. Here's the excerpt from the article published soon after the earthquake.
Ancient Collision Made Nepal Earthquake Inevitable
More
than 25 million years ago, India, once a separate island on a quickly
sliding piece of the Earth’s crust, crashed into Asia. The two land
masses are still colliding, pushed together at a speed of 1.5 to 2
inches a year. The forces have pushed up the highest mountains in the
world, in the Himalayas, and have set off devastating earthquakes.
Experts
had warned of the danger to the people of Katmandu for decades. The
death toll in Nepal on Saturday was practically inevitable given the
tectonics, the local geology that made the shaking worse and the lax
construction of buildings that could not withstand the shaking.
GeoHazards
International, a nonprofit organization in Menlo Park, Calif., that
tries to help poorer, more vulnerable regions like Nepal prepare for
disasters, had noted that major earthquakes struck that region about
every 75 years.
In 1934 — 81 years ago — more than 10,000 people died in a magnitude 8.1
earthquake in eastern Nepal, about six miles south of Mount Everest. A
smaller quake in 1988 with a magnitude of 6.8 killed more than 1,000
people.
Update: 26.04.2015, 12-45 pm
Similar kind of shudder is felt for about 6-7 seconds. The aftershock was of 6.9 magnitude. This time the epicenter was Kodarib.
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