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2011 Lorca earthquake

Moderate 5.1 Mw earthquake in Spain

2011 Lorca earthquake

Moderate 5.1 Mw earthquake in Spain

FieldValue
title2011 Lorca earthquake
*Terremoto de Lorca de 2011*
imageLorca earthquake.jpg
imagecaptionThe damaged Lorca-Sutullena railway station in Lorca
map2{{Location mapSpain
width260
floatnone
bordernone
lat37.699
long-1.672
markBullseye1.png
marksize50
positiontop
reliefyes
timestamp2011-05-11 16:47:25
isc-event16505634
anss-urlusp000j1en
local-date11 May 2011
local-time18:47:26 CEST (UTC+02:00)
magnitude5.1
depth1.0 km
location
countries affectedSpain
intensity
PGA0.367 *g*
foreshocks1 (4.5 )
casualties9 dead
403 injured

Terremoto de Lorca de 2011 | isc-event = 16505634 | anss-url = usp000j1en | local-date = 11 May 2011 | local-time = 18:47:26 CEST (UTC+02:00) 403 injured The 2011 Lorca earthquake () was a moderate 5.1 earthquake that occurred 6:47 p.m. CEST (16:47 UTC) on 11 May 2011, near the town of Lorca, causing significant localized damage in the Region of Murcia, Spain, and panic among locals, and displacing many from their homes. The quake was preceded by a magnitude 4.4 () foreshock at 17:05 (15:05 UTC), that inflicted substantial damage to many older structures in the area, including the historical Espolón Tower of Lorca Castle, the Hermitage of San Clemente and the Convent of Virgen de Las Huertas. Three people were killed by a falling cornice. A total of nine deaths have been confirmed, while dozens are reported injured. The earthquake was the worst to hit the region since a 5.0 Mw tremor struck west of Albolote, Granada in 1956.

Geology

Earthquake intensity map

The magnitude 5.1 main shock occurred inland on 11 May 2011 at 18:47 local time (16:47 UTC) in the locality of Lorca, Spain, The earthquake was estimated to be a direct result of strike-slip faulting near the major Alhama de Murcia fault, along an unusually shallow fault of between 40 and long. Local specialists also reported the presence of surface rupturing in the vicinity of the fault. Due to the shallow depth, the earthquake resulted in significant shaking throughout much of Murcia. In Lorca, near the epicentre of the quake, strong ground motions registered a maximum intensity of VI on the Mercalli scale, while many adjacent areas reported moderate shaking (MM V). Widespread light tremors were observed in locations up to several hundred kilometers from the epicentre, including Alicante (MM III) and Madrid.

Foreshock

The earthquake was preceded by a magnitude 4.5 (ML) foreshock that struck very close to its epicentre at 17:05 local time (15:05 UTC).

Aftershock

As of 11 May, at least eight light aftershocks were reported near the initial quake epicentres; the strongest registered a magnitude of 4.1 (ML) and occurred at 22:37 local time (20:37 UTC).

Emergency management

Shortly after the second earthquake struck, the Spanish government, at the request of regional government of Murcia, activated the Military Emergencies Unit, a branch of the Spanish Armed Forces responsible for providing disaster relief. 340 members from three battalions (based at Bétera, Torrejón de Ardoz and Morón de la Frontera) were dispatched to Lorca under the management of the Lieutenant Colonel of the Bétera battalion; these were later joined by army units. A field hospital was set up by the Military Emergencies Unit in the Plaza del Ayuntamiento where those injured were attended to by members of Protección Civil and the Red Cross.

language = Spanish}}</ref><br />

Possible causes

Several research groups investigated the cause of this earthquake. The Active Tectonics Group of the Complutense University of Madrid in collaboration with the Instituto Andaluz de Geofísica using tectonic evidences, InSAR analysis and seismological analysis of the rupture concluded that this earthquake was produced by the reactivation of a small section (3 km x 4 km) of the Alhama de Murcia Fault (AMF) located 3 km northeast of Lorca, Spain. These conclusions were published in the journal Tectonophysics (journal) in April 2012. The great damage produced by this moderate magnitude earthquake may be explained by the southwestward directivity of a shallow rupture that induced high acceleration values in Lorca village. From the tectonic point of view this earthquake can be considered as an ordinary event coherent with the tectonic evolution and mechanical characteristics of the Alhama de Murcia Fault. In fact, similar earthquakes occurred in Lorca in the 16th and 17th centuries. Several research projects conducted during the last 25 years on this fault recognized the occurrence of much larger earthquakes ( 6.0) during the last 10,000 years.

Other scientific research has suggested that the earthquake was caused by human activity. A team led by Pablo Gonzalez of the University of Western Ontario in Canada reported in the journal Nature Geoscience in October 2012 that the pattern of earth movement was consistent with changes in stresses caused by the removal of water from underground reservoirs.

References

References

  1. {{Cite isc. EHB. 16505634
  2. {{Short-isc. EHB. 16505634
  3. {{Cite anss. Spain. 2011. usp000j1en. M 5.1 - Spain
  4. (13 May 2011). "Los terremotos paradójicos". El País.
  5. (11 May 2011). "Magnitude 4.5 – SPAIN – 2011-05-11 15:05 UTC". EMSC.
  6. (9 January 2012). "CATDAT Damaging Earthquakes Database 2011 – Annual Review".
  7. (11 May 2011). "Magnitude 5.1 – Spain". United States Geological Survey.
  8. M. Carmen Cruz. "Minuto a minuto: El funeral por las víctimas será esta tarde en el recinto de Santa Quiteria". RTVE.es.
  9. [http://elpais.com/elpais/2011/05/12/actualidad/1305188249_850215.html El terremoto de Lorca causa la "mayor catástrofe" patrimonial en Europa en los últimos años] {{in lang. es
  10. (11 May 2011). "Dos terremotos sacuden Lorca y causan ocho muertos · ELPAÍS.com". Elpais.com.
  11. Tremlett, Giles. (12 May 2011). "Spain Shocked by Deadly Earthquake". The Guardian.
  12. EFE. (11 May 2011). "El seísmo de Lorca, el que ha causado más víctimas desde 1956". [[ABC (newspaper).
  13. (11 May 2011). "Murcia es una zone habitual de movimientos sísmicos pero no de los dos terremotos registrados este miércoles". [[Europa Press (news agency).
  14. (11 May 2011). "Magnitude 5.1 – Spain: Tectonic Summary". United States Geological Survey.
  15. (2003). "Effects of repeated paleoearthquakes on the Alhama de Murcia Fault (Betic Cordillera, Spain) on the Quaternary evolution of an alluvial fan system". Annals of Geophysics.
  16. EFE. (11 May 2011). "Los dos seísmos se deben a un deslizamiento horizontal de falla de Lorca". [[American Broadcasting Company.
  17. {{Short-anss. Spain. 2011
  18. (11 May 2011). "Un terremoto de 4,5 grados con epicentro en Lorca sacude la Región". Teleprensa.
  19. EFE. (11 May 2011). "Los sismógrafos detectan varias réplicas tras el segundo terremoto de Lorca". [[American Broadcasting Company.
  20. (11 May 2011). "Magnitude 4.1 – SPAIN – 2011-05-11 20:37 UTC". EMSC.
  21. (12 May 2011). "El Ejército instala un hospital de campaña para los damnificados por el terremoto". El País.
  22. Mariano Zafra. (13 May 2011). "Consecuencias de los seísmos en Lorca". El País.
  23. (1979). "Quaternary strike-slip faults in southeastern Spain". Tectonophysics.
  24. (2012). "Tectonic and seismic implications of an intersegment rupture. The damaging May 11th 2011 Mw 5.2 Lorca, Spain, earthquake". Tectonophysics.
  25. (2012). "An exceptionally long paleoseismic record of a slow-moving fault: The Alhama de Murcia fault (Eastern Betic shear zone, Spain)". Geological Society of America Bulletin.
  26. (21 October 2012). "Spanish quake was man-made – study". [[Irish Independent]].
  27. (21 October 2012). "The 2011 Lorca earthquake slip distribution controlled by groundwater crustal unloading". [[Nature Geoscience]].
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