4
March, 2019
The
Pacific Ring of Fire has shocked the region with 46 separate
earthquakes in 24 hours this month, as preparations continue for the
"highly imminent" megaquake capable of wiping out cities.
Fears
of another devastating earthquake and tsunami are growing in Japan
after multiple sightings of the rare and ominous oarfish. According
to legend, large snake-like creatures come to the surface and beach
themselves on land ahead of underwater earthquakes.
Just
days ago a magnitude 6.2 quake struck off northern Japan, about 184km
of the city of Nemuro in the Hokkaido region. This quake struck at a
depth of just 10km.
It
was part of a mass of recent activity that included a magnitude 7.1
earthquake off southern Peru, 67km north-northwest of Juliaca. The
quake sparked mass evacuations and the effects were strong enough to
be felt in Brazil, Bolivia and Chile.
The
'Ring' is a horseshoe-shaped loop running from New Zealand to Chile.
About 90 percent of the world's earthquakes happen in the Ring, where
three-quarters of the world's active volcanoes are located.
Scientists
say it's statistically likely to have regular activity somewhere
around the ring at any given time.
"It's
not referred to as the "ring of fire" because it sits there
doing nothing," volcanologist Dr Janine Krippner said on
Twitter.
"It
is a constantly-moving, very active (and huge) area full of faults
and active volcanoes."
However
Japan is already stepping up preparations for another magnitude-9
earthquake after warnings that another disaster is "highly
imminent".
Earthquake
experts have noticed changes in the Kuril Trench area off the
Japanese coast - the same changes in seismic activity that were seen
before the March 2011 earthquake which triggered a giant tsunami that
killed almost 19,000 people and heavily damaged the Fukushima nuclear
plant.
According
to Japan's Earthquake Research Committee, a 2017 analysis of
historical data predicts an earthquake will probably occur off the
Pacific coast of Hokkaido and trigger a tsunami within 30 years.
"There
is an extremely high probability. The chances of an earthquake like
the East Japan Earthquake occurring on the Kuril Trench are high,"
committee chairman Naoshi Hirata warned.
The
last such megaquake caused a tsunami over 20 metres high which
reached about four kilometres inland, researchers at Hokkaido
University say.
Newshub
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