Newfound fault may explain quakes.On the morning of Nov. 1, 1755, the thriving port city of Lisbon, Portugal, was devastated dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. by three earthquakes, the tsunamis they triggered, and an ensuing fire. Tens of thousands of residents lost their lives. Now, tsunami simulations suggest that a newly discovered fault zone beneath the Atlantic Ocean Atlantic Ocean [Lat.,=of Atlas], second largest ocean (c.31,800,000 sq mi/82,362,000 sq km; c.36,000,000 sq mi/93,240,000 sq km with marginal seas). Physical Geography Extent and Seas could be the source of most of the seismic energy released that day. Lisbon experienced the three temblors within 10 minutes, says Maria Ana Baptista, a geophysicist at the University of Lisbon The University of Lisbon (Universidade de Lisboa, pron. IPA: [univɨɾsi'dad(ɨ) dɨ liʒ'boɐ]; latin Universitas Olisiponensis) is a public university in Lisbon, Portugal. . Scientists have long debated where those earthquakes originated because the two known fault zones beneath the ocean southwest of Portugal--the Guadalquivir Ridge and the Gorringe Bank faults--aren't long enough to have released the total seismic energy of that day's quakes. Also, Baptista notes, the estimated arrival times for tsunamis generated by quakes along those faults don't match historical accounts of when the killer waves reached the port. Finally, researchers haven't found any evidence of large undersea landslides that could have triggered the tsunamis, so most scientists suspect that all three waves were generated by the earthquakes themselves. Recent seismic surveys of the Atlantic seafloor east of Gibraltar suggest that there's a subduction zone subduction zone, large-scaled narrow region in the earth's crust where, according to plate tectonics, masses of the spreading oceanic lithosphere bend downward into the earth along the leading edges of converging lithospheric plates where it slowly melts at about 400 where the African tectonic tectonic /tec·ton·ic/ (tek-ton´ik) pertaining to construction. plate dips below the Eurasian plate The Eurasian Plate is a tectonic plate covering Eurasia (a landmass consisting of the traditional continents of Europe and Asia) except that it does not cover the Indian subcontinent, the Arabian subcontinent, and the area east of the Verkhoyansk Range in East Siberia. . An earthquake there in which fault surfaces slipped about 20 meters--the sort of earthquake that might occur every 1,500 years or so--could have generated a magnitude 8.8 earthquake. That temblor, with smaller ones along the Guadalquivir Ridge and Gorringe Bank faults, could account for the size of the Lisbon quakes on the disastrous day in 1755, as well as the heights and arrival times of the tsunamis the quakes triggered, says Baptista. |
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