856 Damghan earthquake

Coordinates: 36°12′N 54°18′E / 36.2°N 54.3°E / 36.2; 54.3
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Damghan earthquake
Strike-slip
Areas affectedIran
Max. intensityMMI X (Extreme)
Casualties200,000 dead
Map of meizoseismal area for the 856 earthquake and main fault structures

The 856 Damghan earthquake or the 856 Qumis earthquake occurred on 22 December 856 (242

Mercalli intensity scale. The meizoseismal area (area of maximum damage) extended for about 350 kilometres (220 mi) along the southern edge of the eastern Alborz mountains of present-day Iran including parts of Tabaristan and Gorgan. The earthquake's epicenter is estimated to be close to the city of Damghan, which was then the capital of the Persian province of Qumis. It caused approximately 200,000 deaths and is listed by the USGS as the sixth deadliest earthquake in recorded history.[2] This death toll has been debated.[3]

Tectonic setting

Iran lies within the complex zone of

Greater Caucasus mountains, the Apsheron-Balkan Sill and the Kopet Dag mountains in the north.[4] The epicentral area is located in the Alborz mountain range, in which oblique north–south shortening is accommodated by a combination of thrusting and sinistral (left-lateral) strike-slip faulting.[5]

The main active structure in the Qumis region is the Shahrud fault system, which extends for several hundred km. This zone of overall sinistral strike-slip consists of several fault strands, including the Damghan Fault, Northern Damghan Fault, and the Astaneh Fault System, all of which lie within the epicentral area and show evidence of displacement during the Quaternary.[5]

Earthquake characteristics

The earthquake occurred at night.

The longest of the possible candidates for the source of the 856 earthquake is the 150 km long Astaneh Fault System. Trenching along one of the segments of the Astaneh Fault System has provided evidence of a significant earthquake along the fault that occurred well after 600 BC and before 1300 AD, consistent with the 856 event.[5]

Aftershocks affected the area for several years, probably including a damaging earthquake in western

Khurasan.[6]

Damage

The area of significant damage extended along the Alborz for about 350 kilometres (220 mi), including the towns of

Bustam were also destroyed. The earthquake badly affected water supplies in the Qumis area, partly due to springs and qanats drying up, but also because of landslides damming streams. The total death toll for the earthquake is reported as 200,000, with 45,096 casualties in the district of Damghan alone.[6]

Aftermath

Šahr-e Qumis was so badly damaged that it appears to have been abandoned following the earthquake. The effects of the earthquake were still visible in the area between Bastam and Damghan two generations later .[6]

Future seismic hazard

From the results of trenching at a single site along the Astaneh Fault, a repeat period of about 3,700 years has been estimated and no large earthquakes have been recorded in the Damghan area since 856. However, further trenching studies are needed to establish whether the entire length of the fault is typically involved in a rupture event, or whether shorter segments may be responsible for smaller (although damaging) earthquakes with a shorter recurrence period.[5]

See also

References