this seismic zone stretches from the mediterranean region toward turkey, iran and northern india, and experiences 5-6% of quakes. what is it called?
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this seismic zone stretches from the mediterranean region toward turkey iran and northern india and experiences 5
1 Diese seismische Zone erstreckt sich vom Mittelmeer in Richtung Türkei, Iran und Nordindien und erfährt 5-6% Erschütterungen. Wie heißt es?1.1 Karten von Nachbeben in der gesamten Region nach großen …1.2 Aktive Tektonik des Mittelmeers | Geophysik…1.3 Wichtige Erdbebenzonen auf der ganzen Welt – ThoughtCo1.4 im Jahr 2023 Erdbeben in der Türkei-Syrien – Wikipedia1.5 Erdbeben […]
this seismic zone stretches from the mediterranean region toward turkey iran and northern india and experiences 5-6% of quakes. what is it called?
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1 Diese seismische Zone erstreckt sich vom Mittelmeer in Richtung Türkei, Iran und Nordindien und erfährt 5-6% Erschütterungen. Wie heißt es?
1.1 Karten von Nachbeben in der gesamten Region nach großen …
1.2 Aktive Tektonik des Mittelmeers | Geophysik…
1.3 Wichtige Erdbebenzonen auf der ganzen Welt – ThoughtCo
1.4 im Jahr 2023 Erdbeben in der Türkei-Syrien – Wikipedia
1.5 Erdbeben FAQ-13. Was ist eine seismische Zone? – Zentral …
Diese seismische Zone erstreckt sich vom Mittelmeer in Richtung Türkei, Iran und Nordindien und erfährt 5-6% Erschütterungen. Wie heißt es?
Die Nordanatolische Verwerfung verläuft entlang des restlichen Nordens der Türkei nach Westen und war für einige der stärksten Erdbeben verantwortlich. Eine weitere ostanatolische Verwerfung verläuft südöstlich vom gemeinsamen Ausgangspunkt und endet im Mittelmeer nordöstlich von Zypern.
Karten von Nachbeben in der gesamten Region nach großen …
(CNN) Tausende Menschen in der Türkei und in Syrien wurden getötet und Tausende weitere verletzt, nachdem ein Erdbeben der Stärke 7,8 die türkische Provinz Gaziantep nahe der syrischen Grenze früh erschüttert hatte…
Aktive Tektonik des Mittelmeers | Geophysik…
Die Analyse von mehr als 100 Störungsebenenlösungen für Erdbeben im Alpengürtel zwischen dem Mittelatlantischen Rücken und dem östlichen Iran zeigt, dass die aktuelle Verformung das Ergebnis kleiner Kontinentalplatten ist, die sich von der östlichen Türkei und dem westlichen Iran wegbewegen.
Wichtige Erdbebenzonen auf der ganzen Welt – ThoughtCo
Wissenschaftler spürten dieses Zittern sogar in Norwegen. Zentralasien ist ein weiteres Gebiet der weltweit größten Erdbeben. Die größte Aktivität findet in dem Gebiet statt, das sich von der Ostküste des Schwarzen Meeres bis zum Iran und entlang der Südküste des Kaspischen Meeres erstreckt.
im Jahr 2023 Erdbeben in der Türkei-Syrien – Wikipedia
im Jahr 2023 6. Februar 0417 TRT (0117 UTC) Mw 7,8 Erdbeben erschütterte die Süd- und Zentraltürkei sowie Nord- und Westsyrien. Das Epizentrum lag 37 km westnordwestlich von Gaziantep. Die maximale Mercalli-Intensität des Erdbebens war XII (extrem) in Teilen von Antakya in der Provinz Hatay.
Erdbeben FAQ-13. Was ist eine seismische Zone? – Zentral …
Die eurasische seismische Zone, auch als mediterrane seismische Zone bekannt. Diese Zone beginnt im nördlichen Teil des Mittelmeers, einschließlich der italienischen Halbinsel und Sizilien, durch die Türkei, den Iran, Pakistan, Nordindien und bis zu den Grenzen von Qinghai und Sizang in China.
Earthquake Hazards Program
Earthquake Hazards Program
View animations for selected glossary terms
0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
A
Acceleration/peak acceleration
When you push on the gas pedal in the car or put on the brakes, the car goes faster or slower. When it is changing from one speed to another, it is accelerating (faster) or decelerating (slower). This change from one speed, or velocity, to another is called acceleration. Technically, then, acceleration is how much the velocity changes in a unit time. During an earthquake when the ground is shaking, it also experiences acceleration. The peak acceleration is the largest increase in velocity recorded by a particular station during an earthquake.
Accelerogram
The recording of the acceleration of the ground during an earthquake.
Accelerograph
An instrument that records the acceleration of the ground during an earthquake, also commonly called an accelerometer.
Accretionary wedge
Sediments, the top layer of material on a tectonic plate, that accumulate and deform where oceanic and continental plates collide. These sediments are scraped off the top of the downgoing oceanic crustal plate and are appended to the edge of the continental plate.
Active fault
A fault that is likely to have another earthquake sometime in the future. Faults are commonly considered to be active if they have moved one or more times in the last 10,000 years.
Aftershocks
Earthquakes that follow the largest shock of an earthquake sequence. They are smaller than the mainshock and within 1-2 rupture lengths distance from the mainshock. Aftershocks can continue over a period of weeks, months, or years. In general, the larger the mainshock, the larger and more numerous the aftershocks, and the longer they will continue.
Alluvium
Loose gravel, sand, silt, or clay deposited by current or past streams.
Amplification
Shaking levels at a site may be increased, or amplified, by focusing of seismic energy caused by the geometry of the sediment velocity structure, such as basin subsurface topography, or by surface topography.
Amplitude
The size of the wiggles on an earthquake recording.
Arc
A chain of volcanoes (volcanic arc) that sometimes forms on the land when an oceanic plate collides with a continental plate and then slides down underneath it (subduction)
Aseismic
A fault on which no earthquakes have been observed.
Asperity
An area on a fault that is stuck. The earthquake rupture usually begins at an asperity.
A visual guide to the earthquakes that hit Turkey and Syria
Video and maps of the impact of the huge earthquake and aftershocks that have killed thousands
Drone footage shows rescuers searching through rubble in Adana, Turkey
Turkey Explainer
A visual guide to the earthquakes that hit Turkey and Syria
Video and maps of the impact of the huge earthquake and aftershocks that have killed thousands
Oliver Holmes, Lucy Swan and Maheen Sadiq
Mon 6 Feb 2023 16.10 GMT
A massive earthquake that rocked central Turkey and Syria has killed more than 4,800 people and injured thousands more, flattened apartment blocks and wreaked destruction on towns and cities in neighbouring Syria already devastated by years of war.
A building collapses in the Haliliye district of Şanlıurfa province, Turkey, during an aftershock
When did the earthquake happen?
The magnitude 7.8 quake hit before sunrise in cold winter weather. It was the worst to strike Turkey this century. Its epicentre was close to the southern city of Gaziantep, and tremors were felt as far away as Cyprus, Cairo and Mosul.
How the first earthquake shook the region
Were there aftershocks?
The initial earthquake was followed by more than 100 aftershocks, including a magnitude 7.5 tremor during the day on Monday that interrupted search and rescue efforts.
The second big earthquake was caught live on TV in Malatya, Turkey
The European Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) said preliminary data showed that the second large quake occurred 67km (42 miles) north-east of Kahramanmaraş, Turkey, at a depth of 2km.
A building collapses in Malatya in Turkey after second earthquake
How many people have been killed?
At least 2,379 people were confirmed dead in Turkey, the Disaster and Emergency Management Authority said, and 1,444 in Syria, according to figures from the Damascus government and rescue workers.
Thousands more were injured, with the death toll expected to rise.
Video circulating on social media appears to show a building collapsing in Aleppo, Syria, after the quake
The first quake damaged the historic Gaziantep Castle, which has been in use since Roman times. Other historical sites across the region may have been damaged.
What is the international rescue response?
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, said 45 countries had already offered help with search and rescue efforts. More than 10 search and rescue teams from the EU have been mobilised.
The International Rescue Committee called for increased funding for humanitarian aid in Syria, saying many people in the north-west had already been displaced up to 20 times, and that medical care in the region was “strained beyond capacity even before this tragedy”.
Search and rescue efforts underway in Diyarbakır, Turkey
Are earthquakes common in the area?
Turkey is in one of the world’s most active earthquake zones, with land stretching over the Anatolian fault line in the north of the country that has caused large and destructive tremors.
In 1999, a tremor of a similar magnitude to Monday’s quakes devastated İzmit, killing more than 17,000 people. Erdoğan described Monday’s disaster as Turkey’s worst since 1939, when an earthquake killed more than 32,000 people and injured more than 100,000.
Topics Turkey Syria Earthquakes Natural disasters
Middle East and north Africa
Turkey-Syria earthquake 2023
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