First Place Honors
The honor of greatest earthquake
of all time goes to the 1960 Chile earthquake because scientists were able to catch this one on tape. In
other words, there have been a lot of really big earthquakes throughout human
history (and even greater ones before we came on the scene), but this one
they were able to measure, record and verify it's ground motion strength. The
instruments that seismologists use to measure earthquake magnitudes are
designed to detect the amount of energy released by the movement of the
ground during a quake. In the case of the Chile earthquake, the amount of energy released during the quake, not the
number of human deaths and damage to structures,
earned it the title of greatest.
The epicenter of the earthquake (the point on the earth's surface
directly above the focus of an earthquake) was 60 meters down below the ocean
floor about 100 miles off the coast of Chile out in the Pacific. The nearby towns of Valdivia and Puerto Montt
suffered devastating damage because of their closeness to the center of such
a massive quake. The loss of human life was not as bad as it could have been
because there were large foreshocks that sent people into the streets
talking. About 30 minutes after the foreshocks, when the main jolt came, many
people were still outside calming their jitters from the first shock. The
buildings and homes that fell had pretty much vacated. However, damage cost
estimates were over a half billion dollars.
Not only was there damage to man-made structures during
the quake, but the earth itself was forever changed by the enormous amount of
energy released from below. Huge landslides, massive flows of earthen debris
and rock, were sent tumbling down mountain slopes. Some landslides were so
enormous they changed the course of major rivers or dammed them up creating
new lakes. The land along the coast of Chile, particularly in the Port city of Peurto Montt, subsided (sunk
downward) as a result of the movement of the ground during the quake and the
coastal city was flooded with ocean water. (See below, left).
The damage from the quake was not limited to the nearby
shores of Chile. Enormous waves or tsunamis (read
about the world's biggest), traveled for thousands of miles across the
vast expanse of the Pacific Ocean, reaching the shores of Hawaii, the
Philippines, and even Japan devastating everything in their path. The
tsunamis were created by the shifting of the sea floor that generated the
huge temblor. It was as though someone had dropped a huge boulder in the
ocean right over the epicenter of the quake, sending enormous ripples in
every direction, traveling at speeds up to 200 miles per hour!
Deep Rumblings
So what caused the earthquake? Whenever an earthquake of
any size happens anywhere in the world the same basic thing happens; the
ground along either side of a fault (a fracture or crack in the ground) moves.
Sometimes faults are just cracks in the earth caused by
buckling and stress from the movement of the tectonic plates and sometimes the faults are plate boundaries (where the
edges of the tectonic plates meet) See the page on Ocean's Deep for more
information. The subduction (downward movement) of the Nazca
plate under the the South American continent is
what caused the major quake back in 1960 (see the page on Plate Tectonics). In fact, the Nazca plate
continues to dive down below the continent and it's this constant slow
movement (with some occasional rapid shifts leading to big jolts) that
creates earthquakes throughout that region.
Chile has seen many earthquakes both before the 1960
record-setting temblor and after. Two very large contenders have happened on March 3, 1985, and another on July 30, 1995. These earthquakes both had a magnitude of about 8.
Chilean earthquakes are not rare nor are they small. Large earthquakes in Chile seem, through history, to occur about every 25 to 100
years. They'll continue as long as the Pacific plate continues subducting.
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