Login   |      Register
English    中文


Earthquake in South-Central Pakistan on September 24, 2013

2018-03-27  |   Editor : houguangbing  
Category : Events

The September 24, 2013 M 7.7 earthquake in south-central Pakistan occurred as the result of oblique-strike-slip type motion at the shallow crustal depths. The location and mechanism of the earthquake are consistent with the rupture within the Eurasia plate above the Makran subduction zone. The event occurred within the transition zone between northward subduction of the Arabia plate beneath the Eurasia plate and northward collision of the India plate with the Eurasia plate. The epicenter of the event is 69km north of Awaran, Pakistan, and 270km north of Karachi, Pakistan (population 11.6 million).

On a broad scale, the tectonics of southern and central Pakistan reflect a complex plate boundary, where the India plate slides northward relative to the Eurasia plate in the east, and the Arabia plate subducts northward beneath the Eurasia plate in the Makran (western Pakistan). These motions typically result in north-south to northeast-southwest strike-slip motion at the latitude of the September 24 earthquake that is primarily accommodated on the Chaman Fault, with the earthquake potentially occurring on one of the southern-most strands of this fault system.

    Sign in for comments!

Comment list ( 0 )

 



Most concern
Recent articles