Alaska Hit By Year's Strongest Quake

The massive quake damaged three major highways



November 4, 2002
By Dr David Whitehouse

The largest earthquake anywhere in the world this year has struck central Alaska.

I ran out to the car and it was hard to stand up - Geophysicist Paul Whitmore

It measured 7.9 on the Richter scale. Highways were damaged but no casualties have been reported, and the Trans-Alaskan oil pipeline was left unaffected.

United States Geological Survey spokeswoman Carolyn Bell says the epicentre of the quake was 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Fairbanks and about 280 km (175 miles) northeast of Anchorage.

It occurred just after 1300 local time (2200 GMT).

Pipeline checks

The earthquake occurred on a segment of the Denali geological fault that runs through Alaska. It was in the same area as a previous magnitude 6.7 quake that struck on 23 October.

"The only damage I know of right now is serious cracks up to a foot wide and earth displacement in the Denali Park's highways," Bell says.


"It's quite large. There's going to be damage to buildings," she added.

The Alaska Earthquake Information Center said the earthquake had been felt strongly throughout the state.

The quake triggered the automatic protection system on the Trans-Alaskan oil pipeline. Engineers manually shut it down a short time later. A helicopter survey later gave the pipeline the all clear.

'Wake-up call'

There are preliminary reports of light damage in communities throughout central Alaska.

Paul Whitmore, a geophysicist at the West Coast Alaska Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska, near Anchorage, said the quake "almost knocked me off my feet."

"I ran out to the car and it was hard to stand up. That's the first earthquake I ever felt outside. That's pretty unusual. We were a long way from the epicentre," he said.

"Sometimes we see that after big earthquakes; the seismicity in the whole region may tick up.

"This is a good case for people to review their safety plans, make sure their bookcases are attached to the walls and so forth. It's really a good wake up call," he added.

Quake records

The Denali fault is a major, seismically active strike-slip fault that cuts through Alaska, slicing the rugged Alaska Range of mountains and bounding the precipitous north face of Mt McKinley, the highest peak in North America.

Denali is the local name for McKinley.

Streams and glacial moraines crossing the fault have been displaced because of its movement in the past. Some geologists believe that two sides of the fault-line have slipped over 400 km (250 miles) in the past 200 million years.

Scientists have believed that this section of the Denali fault has the potential of generating earthquakes as large as magnitude class 8, but none that large have been recorded in historic time, since the beginning of the last century.

The largest earthquake ever recorded in North America was a 9.2, which occurred on another section of the Denali fault line near Prince William Sound in Alaska in 1964. 125 people were killed.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2395999.stm