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1920 Haiyuan earthquake
1920 earthquake in central China
1920 earthquake in central China
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | 1920 Haiyuan earthquake |
| timestamp | 1920-12-16 12:05:55 |
| anss-url | iscgem912687 |
| isc-event | 912687 |
| local-date | |
| (Gansu-Sichuan Time) | |
| local-time | 19:05 |
| map2 | |
| lat | 36.50 |
| long | 105.70 |
| mark | Bullseye1.png |
| marksize | 40 |
| position | top |
| width | 250 |
| float | right |
| caption | }} -- |
| magnitude | 7.9 |
| location | |
| countries affected | Haiyuan, |
| Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, | |
| Republic of China | |
| casualties | 258,707~273,407 fatalities |
| intensity | |
| landslide | 50,000 |
| fault | Haiyuan Fault |
| image | File:1920 Gansu earthquake.svg |
| anss-url = iscgem912687 | isc-event = 912687 | local-date = (Gansu-Sichuan Time) | local-time = 19:05 Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, Republic of China The 1920 Haiyuan earthquake () occurred in Haiyuan County, Ningxia Province, Republic of China at 19:05:53 (UTC+8) on December 16, 1920. It was also called the 1920 Gansu earthquake because Ningxia was a part of Gansu Province when the earthquake occurred. It caused destruction in the Lijunbu-Haiyuan-Ganyanchi area and was assigned the maximum intensity on the Mercalli intensity scale (XII Extreme). Estimates of the death toll range from 258,707 to 273,407, making it one of the deadliest earthquakes in China and disasters in China by death toll.
Tectonic setting
Major left-lateral strike-slip structures occur in the Tibetan Plateau as a result of the India–Asia collision. These faults, including the Altyn Tagh, Haiyuan, Kunlun, Karakoram and Xianshuihe faults, accommodate crustal deformation within the Tibetan Plateau. One of these fault systems, the Haiyuan Fault, runs 1,000 km along the plateau's northeastern edge.
Earthquake
The earthquake hit at 19:05:53 Gansu-Sichuan time (12:05:53 UTC), reportedly 8.25 or 7.8 ML, and was followed by a series of aftershocks for three years. The often cited magnitude in scientific literature is M 8.5 which has been regarded as an overestimate due to the limited technological advancements and instrumentation during the period which the earthquake occurred. On the moment magnitude scale which measures an earthquake with respect to its physical parameters, it is estimated at 7.9. The International Seismological Centre also catalogs the earthquake at 7.9.
About 230 km of surface faulting was seen from Lijunbu through Ganyanchi to Jingtai. There were over 50,000 landslides in the epicentral area and ground cracking was widespread. Some rivers were dammed; others changed course. Seiches from this earthquake were observed in two lakes and three fjords in western Norway.
Field observations in the 1980s found 237 km of surface rupture along the Haiyuan Fault with a maximum horizontal offset of 6.5 m in the middle section of the rupture zone. The earthquake ruptured the section of the Haiyuan Fault between the Laohushan segment in the west and Liupanshan Thrust Fault to the east. The earthquake's epicenter is also likely near Haiyuan which is supported by the seismic intensity distribution.
Damage and aftermath
Over 73,000 people were killed in Haiyuan County. A landslide buried the village of Sujiahe in Xiji County. More than 30,000 people were killed in Guyuan County. Nearly all the houses collapsed in the cities of Longde and Huining. Damage (VI–X) occurred in seven provinces and regions, including the major cities of Lanzhou, Taiyuan, Xi'an, Xining and Yinchuan. It was felt from the Yellow Sea to Qinghai (Tsinghai) Province and from Nei Mongol (Inner Mongolia) south to central Sichuan Province.
Since 2003, Chinese seismologists have calculated 258,707~273,407 to be the empirical verifiable range of death toll. Older sources put the deaths to be 234,117 or 235,502. Either way, it is one of the most fatal earthquakes in China, in turn making it one of the worst disasters in China by death toll.
Many more perished because of cold: frequent aftershocks caused the survivors to fear building anything other than temporary shelters, and a severe winter killed many who had lived through the original earthquake.
The Sufi Jahriyya Muslim Hui leader Ma Yuanzhang and his son died in the earthquake when the roof of the Mosque they were in collapsed in Zhangjiachuan. Some of the first responders to the worst-hit towns, such as Guyuan, were soldiers from the Chinese military garrison commanded by Lu Hongtao at nearby Pingliang who arrived within days, bringing in tents and relief goods and evacuating the wounded back to Pingliang by cart. Soup kitchens were also set up by gentry, merchants and other members of Guyuan’s community to serve the needy until transportation routes were restored and the markets were replenished. In other stricken communities, such as Jingning, tents and emergency relief were provided by the magistrate working out of the county government office.The Muslim General Ma Fuxiang was involved in relief efforts in Lanzhou during the earthquake.
References
References
- (2020). "Landslides of the 1920 Haiyuan earthquake, northern China". Landslides.
- "Most Destructive Known Earthquakes on Record in the World". United States Geological Survey.
- (November 2021). "Coseismic slip gradient at the western terminus of the 1920 Haiyuan Mw 7.9 earthquake". [[Journal of Structural Geology]].
- National Geophysical Data Center / World Data Service (NGDC/WDS): NCEI/WDS Global Significant Earthquake Database. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information.. (1972). "Significant earthquake Information". NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information.
- (2014). "海原断裂带强震发生概率的评估方". 地震学报.
- (2023). "Discussion on the overestimated magnitude of the 1920 Haiyuan earthquake". Acta Seismologica Sinica.
- ISC. (2022). "ISC-GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1904–2018)". [[International Seismological Centre]].
- (2015). "Variability in magnitude of paleo-earthquakes revealed by trenching and historical records, along the Haiyuan fault". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth.
- (6 Jul 2020). "Magnitude of the 1920 Haiyuan Earthquake Reestimated Using Seismological and Geomorphological Methods". [[Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth]].
- 刘百篪,张俊玲,吴建华,郭华,《1920年12月16日海原8.5级大地震的伤亡人口再评估》,《中国地震》.
- 张思源. (2013). "1920年海原大地震死亡人数考析". 西夏研究.
- 张思源. (2013). "1920年海原大地震死亡人数考析". 西夏研究.
- 张思源. (2013). "1920年海原大地震死亡人数考析". 西夏研究.
- Close, Upton, and Elsie McCormick. "Where the Mountains Walked". ''National Geographic'' 41.5 (1922): 445–464: 451.
- Jonathan Neaman Lipman. (1997). "Familiar Strangers: A History of Muslims in Northwest China". University of Washington Press.
- (1979). "Chinese Republican studies newsletter, Volumes 5-7". University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Center for Asian Studies.
- Pierre Fuller. (2022). "Modern Erasures: Revolution, the Civilizing Mission, and the Shaping of China’s Past". Cambridge University Press.
- "马福祥--"戎马书生" – 新华网甘肃频道".
- "缅怀中国近代史上的回族将领马福祥将军戎马一生".
- "清末民国间爱国将领马福祥__中国甘肃网".
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