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View Full Version : 7.1 Magnitude Earthquake Devastates China



Amiel
2010-04-14, 07:41 AM
Another strong earthquake (http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/04/14/2872995.htm) rocks the world (http://news.ninemsn.com.au/world/1039597/earthquake-hits-china-67-reported-dead); this time, China (http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/1235767/Dozens-dead-in-Qinghai-quake), or should I say, China again.


A strong earthquake hit a remote mountainous area of China on Wednesday, killing about 400 people and injuring thousands as it toppled mud-and-wood houses and at least one school, burying many in rubble.

About 10,000 people were injured in the quake of at least 6.9-magnitude which also disrupted telecommunications, knocked out electricity and triggered landslides in the northwestern province of Qinghai, local officials said.

Rescuers were working with their bare hands to clear debris and find survivors from the rubble, with children said to be among the casualties.

About 400 people have been confirmed dead, Xinhua news agency reported, quoting Huang Limin, a top official in the Yushu prefecture where the quake was centred.

"The injured are everywhere in the street, a lot of people are bleeding from head wounds," Xinhua quoted another local official, identified as Zhuohuaxia, as saying from the town of Jiegu.

The quake wreaked havoc on the flimsy earth and wood houses near the epicentre - a high-altitude area near the border with Tibet and at least 12 hours by road from the provincial capital.

But some sturdier concrete structures also were toppled, according to images broadcast by state television.

Among the casualties were children trapped under the rubble of at least one collapsed school in the town, seat of the Yushu government and near the quake's epicentre, with Xinhua reporting at least five students had died.

"There are about 20 children buried in the debris," Kang Zifu, a local fire department official, was quoted as telling state television.

"We're hurrying to help them... We're also working on the Jiegu commerce and industry department office, where there are about 40 to 50 people buried. They are alive, and we've had contact with them."

It was not immediately clear how many schools had collapsed.

Kang said at least 32 people had been pulled alive from debris in Jiegu.

Rescue teams and equipment were being rushed to the region, Xinhua said, but noted they could be hampered by the infrastructure damage, which included roads blocked by landslides.

Zhuohuaxia said more than 85 per cent of houses had collapsed in Jiegu.

"There is a big crack in the Yushu Hotel and the four-storey meeting hall of the prefecture government has collapsed," he said.

About 700 soldiers have been sent to look for survivors, and more than 5,000 other rescuers will be dispatched to the zone, officials in Qinghai said, according to Xinhua.

The civil affairs ministry was to send 5,000 tents, 50,000 cotton coats and 50,000 quilts to the region, the agency reported.

"We have to mainly rely on our hands to clear away the debris as we have no large excavating machines," said Shi Huajie, a paramilitary police officer working on the rescue operation.

"We have no medical equipment either."

The US Geological Survey put the quake at a magnitude of 6.9 while the China Earthquake Administration measured it at 7.1, saying the extensive damage included cracks in a dam.

The USGS said the quake hit at 7:49am (0949 AEST) and was centred 380 kilometres (240 miles) south-southeast of the city of Golmud, at a depth of 46 kilometres.

A series of aftershocks later rattled the area, with magnitudes of up to 5.8, the USGS reported.

The quake was also felt strongly in neighbouring regions, including Tibet, Xinhua said. Further aftershocks were likely in the coming days, seismologists said.

The remote high-altitude region is prone to earthquakes. Its economy is based heavily on farming and livestock herding by its overwhelmingly ethnic Tibetan population.

A massive 8.0-magnitude quake in May 2008 in neighbouring Sichuan province devastated a huge area of southwestern China, leaving at least 87,000 people dead or missing.

Repeated calls by AFP to local government headquarters, businesses and the local airport in Yushu county went unanswered.

"The houses here are almost all made of wood and earthen walls. Some collapsed when the quake happened," Karsum Nyima, deputy director of the news department of Yushu TV, was quoted saying.

Haruki-kun
2010-04-14, 08:19 AM
Not another one. :smallfrown:

Amiel
2010-04-15, 05:18 AM
:smallfrown: Yeah, it's like the world is fed up for some reason...


No love for China?

Emperor Ing
2010-04-15, 05:22 AM
Well if you consider that the world is overdue for some cataclysmic disaster i'd say the fact we haven't been hit by a 10.5 yet's pretty good. But if this turns out to be because someone is doing something stupid, like going into the core of the earth usng a gigantic freakin' drill, i'll laugh.

Amiel
2010-04-15, 05:25 AM
It'd be hilarious if they decide "to fix the earth" that way (by taking a giant drill that pierces the core instead of the heavens); like in the Core. Such a lame movie that.

Emperor Ing
2010-04-15, 06:07 AM
The movie never happened. Read the book, that is all.

Amiel
2010-04-15, 06:21 AM
Horribly horribles movies aside, does anyone seriously believe that the world is due for a cataclysmic event sometime, say, in 2012? The year is not so much for the association with the end of the Mayan calendar and more the fact as mentioned that we are totally due for a disaster on a scale we have never before seen.

Nameless
2010-04-15, 06:24 AM
:smallfrown: Yeah, it's like the world is fed up for some reason...


No love for China?

It’s not that we’re having more earthquakes, it’s just that they’re striking in more places where people live. It’s sad really, but there isn’t much that can be done to prevent it from happening. :smallfrown:

Dallas-Dakota
2010-04-15, 06:33 AM
People are just living in more places and building more buildings. Still sad though.

Emperor Ing
2010-04-15, 07:01 AM
Horribly horribles movies aside, does anyone seriously believe that the world is due for a cataclysmic event sometime, say, in 2012? The year is not so much for the association with the end of the Mayan calendar and more the fact as mentioned that we are totally due for a disaster on a scale we have never before seen.

The only legitimate disaster I can see happening is that every so often the Earth's magnetic field flips. South becomes North and vice versa. During this process, which takes place over many years, the magnetic field dissapears, leaving us vulnerable to solar radiation.

Apparently as of a few years ago, there's been several fluctuations in the magnetic field to suggest a flip could begin to take place in the not-so-distant future.

Linky (http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/06/080630-earth-core.html)

And I might be getting off topic, so...my condolences to the Chinese and their families. :smallfrown:

ApeofLight
2010-04-15, 07:34 AM
Man another earthquake?

I hope China's people are alright and can recover quickly.

Chalk up one more earthquake.

Killer Angel
2010-04-15, 07:42 AM
The only legitimate disaster I can see happening is that every so often the Earth's magnetic field flips. South becomes North and vice versa. During this process, which takes place over many years, the magnetic field dissapears, leaving us vulnerable to solar radiation.


The inversion of polar magnetic field is a process that is not unusual.
The last one, happened less than one million years ago (800.000 if I recall correctly). Life on earth didn't suffer for that (so, solar radiation are always stopped).
Of course, we have no historical data regarding the ripercussion on technical instruments... :smalltongue:

Closak
2010-04-15, 07:50 AM
Man, the planet is pissed at human civilization :smalleek:

Gaia's Vengeance...starting now.

But seriously, imagine if somehow the planet itself was sentient, don't you think it would be just a little bit pissed at what humanity has done to it lately?


...I just had another of those episodes didn't i?


Oh look, the sea level is rising...AH WE ARE ALL DROWNING!
Oh look, the weather is behaving oddly...OH MY GOD TORNADOS EVERYWHERE!!
Oh look, yellowstone is going BOOM...Wait...OH SHIIIIIIIII- [Huge explosion]

Haruki-kun
2010-04-15, 08:47 AM
Horribly horribles movies aside, does anyone seriously believe that the world is due for a cataclysmic event sometime, say, in 2012? The year is not so much for the association with the end of the Mayan calendar and more the fact as mentioned that we are totally due for a disaster on a scale we have never before seen.

http://i163.photobucket.com/albums/t288/Vaarsuvius89/NO-1.jpg

In my lifetime, which spans only 21 years, I've gone through at least 3 supposedly world-ending cataclysmic events. After the third one, you stop caring.

In fact, On December 21, 2012, when I wake up and people tell me "The world is ending today! TODAY!" I'll just say. "It's already tomorrow in Australia."

PS: They turned the LHC on. We're still here.

Boo
2010-04-15, 08:53 AM
I can't think of what I'll say to the Chinese students in my classes...

Maelstrom
2010-04-15, 09:21 AM
I can't think of what I'll say to the Chinese students in my classes...

Er, nothing? Why do you assume that just because they are Chinese, they have been directly affected? Don't you think you should at least find out first?

Coidzor
2010-04-15, 12:08 PM
I should figure out where the fault lines are that have this effect on China.

I'm just glad they're not estimating/citing the death toll in the upper thousands off of the bat. Wonder if any of Tibet was effected though.

Mauther
2010-04-15, 12:57 PM
These disasters have always happened, were just in an era where we like to talk about it and spend a lot of time navel gazing. Major earthquakes, draughts, floods, tsunamis have been happening forever, there's no noticeable uptick. That the loss of life is so large in places like India and China is due to their large population, the sometimes scetchy building codes you get in emergent economies, plus the heightened expectations people have now that these are developed countries. If this was the seventies and an earthquake killed a couple thousand chinese, it would pop on the news for one night and maybe get a mention in Time. Don't believe me, watch how the world reacts the next time monsoons drown a couple thousand in Bangladesh.

The good news this time is the change in the Chinese government's reaction to the crisis.

Emperor Ing
2010-04-15, 01:00 PM
PS: They turned the LHC on. We're still here.

Anyone with half of a formed concept of physics knows the LHC was never in any way gonna destroy the world.

Cleverdan22
2010-04-15, 01:54 PM
Speaking of earthquakes and such, I'm a bit terrified, as my city lies on a huge fault that hasn't had an earthquake like 20 years after its average expected time, so the next quake is going to be huge. Sooo, yeah.

Boo
2010-04-16, 07:37 AM
Er, nothing? Why do you assume that just because they are Chinese, they have been directly affected? Don't you think you should at least find out first?

They live in China, but are learning overseas in my country. They also have family in China. Please don't assume anything. :smallannoyed:

Mercenary Pen
2010-04-16, 07:45 AM
They live in China, but are learning overseas in my country. They also have family in China. Please don't assume anything. :smallannoyed:

My advice would be to do a two minute silence in memory of the dead (bonus points if you can tie it into an official one), and possibly offer to be there if they need somebody to talk to. Hopefully that shouldn't overstep anything or be too pushy on people.

Haruki-kun
2010-04-16, 10:07 AM
Anyone with half of a formed concept of physics knows the LHC was never in any way gonna destroy the world.

And it didn't. :smallwink:

EDIT: Either way, if humans could really destroy the world that easily, I think we would have done so already. I think it was Pratchett who said if there were a button somewhere with a sign reading "don't push or the world will be destroyed" there wouldn't even be enough time for the paint to dry.