Friday, February 12, 2016

PLANETARY TREMORS: Very Strong And Shallow 6.5 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Southeast Of Andekantor, Indonesia - USGS! [MAPS + TECTONIC SUMMARY]

USGS earthquake location.

February 12, 2016 - INDONESIA - A very strong and shallow undersea-quake measuring 6.5 on the Richter scale rocked East Nusa Tenggara in central parts of Indonesia on Friday.

According to US Geological Survey, the quake hit 3 km south east of Adenkanot in Indonesia with a depth of
30.5 km (19.0 miles).

No tsunami warning was issued after the tremor,  and Indonesia's national disaster agency said there were no immediate reports of casualties or damage.

"The quake was felt very strongly for four seconds," disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho told the AFP news agency.


USGS shakemap intensity.


"Residents panicked and rushed out of their homes."

Indonesia's Meteorology and Geophysics Agency registered the temblor with a 6.6 magnitude.


The Earthquake-Report monitoring website said the area has "steep mountain ranges and its vegetation is rainforest, which means that the chance of dangerous landslides is real".

Both Indonesian authorities and the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was no threat of any tsunami waves from the quake.

Indonesia sits on the Pacific "Ring of Fire", where tectonic plates collide, causing frequent seismic and volcanic activity.


Seismotectonics of the Java Region

The Sunda convergent margin extends for 5,600 km from the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea, both located northwest of the map area, towards Sumba Island in the southeast, and then continues eastward as the Banda arc system. This tectonically active margin is a result of the India and Australia plates converging with and subducting beneath the Sunda plate at a rate of approximately 50 to 70 mm/yr. The main physiographic feature associated with this convergent margin is the Sunda-Java Trench, which stretches for 3,000 km parallel to the Java and Sumatra land masses and terminates at 120° E. The convergence of the Indo-Australia and Sunda plates produces two active volcanic arcs: Sunda, which extends from 105 to 122° E and Banda, which extends from 122 to 128° E. The Sunda arc results solely from relatively simple oceanic plate subduction, while the Banda arc represents the transition from oceanic subduction to continental collision, where a complex, broad deforming zone is found.

Based on modern activity, the Banda arc can be divided into three distinct zones: an inactive section, the Wetar Zone - bound by two active segments, the Flores Zone in the west and the Damar Zone in the east. The lack of volcanism in the Wetar Zone is attributed to the collision of Australia with the Sunda plate. The gap in volcanic activity is underlain by a gap in intermediate depth seismicity, which is in contrast to nearly continuous deep seismicity below all three sections of the arc. The Flores Zone is characterized by down-dip compression in the subducted slab at intermediate depths and late Quaternary uplift of the forearc. These unusual features, along with GPS data interpretations, show that the Flores Zone marks the transition between subduction of oceanic crust in the west and the collision of continental crust in the east.


USGS plate tectonics.


The Java section of the Sunda arc is considered relatively aseismic historically when compared to the highly seismically active Sumatra section, despite both areas being located along the same active subduction margin. Shallow (0-20 km) events have occurred historically in the overlying Sunda plate, causing damage to local and regional communities. A recent example was the May 26, 2006 M6.3 left-lateral strike-slip event, which occurred at a depth of 10 km in central Java, and caused over 5,700 fatalities. Intermediate depth (70-300 km) earthquakes frequently occur beneath Java as a result of intraplate faulting within the Australia slab. Deep (300-650 km) earthquakes occur beneath the Java Sea and the back-arc region to the north of Java. Similar to other intermediate depth events these earthquakes are also associated with intraslab faulting. However, this subduction zone exhibits a gap in seismicity from 250-400 km, interpreted as the transition between extensional and compressional slab stresses. Historic examples of large intraplate events include: the 1903 M8.1 event, 1921 M7.5 event, 1977 M8.3 event, and August 2007 M7.5 event.

Large thrust earthquakes close to the Java trench are typically interplate faulting events along the slab interface between the Australia and Sunda plates. These earthquakes also generally have high tsunamigenic potential due to their shallow hypocentral depths. In some cases, these events have demonstrated slow moment-release, and have been defined as ‘tsunami’ earthquakes, where rupture is large in the weak crustal layers very close to the seafloor. These events are categorized by tsunamis that are significantly larger than predicted by the earthquake???s magnitude. The most notable tsunami earthquakes in the Java region occurred on June 2, 1994 (M7.8) and July 17, 2006 (M7.7). The 1994 event produced a tsunami with wave run-up heights of 13 m, killing over 200 people. The 2006 event produced a tsunami of up to 15 m, and killed 730 people. While both of these tsunami earthquakes were characterized by rupture along thrust faults, they were followed by an abundance of normal faulting aftershocks. These aftershocks are interpreted to result from extension within the subducting Australia plate, while the mainshocks represented interplate faulting between the Australia and Sunda plates. - USGS.





GEOLOGICAL UPHEAVALS: Sinkholes Keep Popping Up Across The United States - Sinkhole Blocking Road In North Carolina Growing Significantly, Say Officials!

A sinkhole that shut down a road in Chatham County is growing, and state Department of Transportation crews say it could be another two months before it's fixed.

February 12, 2016 - NORTH CAROLINA, UNITED STATES - A sinkhole that has forced the closure of a road in Chatham County for three weeks is growing, and state Department of Transportation officials said it could be another two-and-a-half months before the road is fixed.

According to DOT officials, old pipes underneath Lystra Road - which crosses Jordan Lake near Pittsboro - gave way on Jan. 18, at first creating a sinkhole that took up about half of one lane.

By Monday, the sinkhole had grown significantly, taking up much of the two-lane road.

Officials said the scope of the work is more complicated than DOT crews can handle, meaning a contractor will be hired to complete the road rebuild. The contractor will be forced to replace two old pipes under the road.




A contractor hasn't been hired yet, and a DOT spokesman said it could be late April before the road is open. "They've got to do what they've got to do. When it gets open, more power to us," said driver Carl Brownell.

A detour is in place around the sinkhole, but it is creating major delays for area schools, Chatham County officials said. The road closure has affected about 548 students at three different schools. The detour time is about 25 minutes, and it affects 13 bus routes, officials said.


Chatham County authorities closed Lystra Road near Jordan Lake on Jan. 18, 2016, because a sinkhole opened up in one lane. © Chatham County Emergency Management


Abdulelah Awad is an airport taxi driver. On Monday, with the meter running and a passenger in the back seat, the detour was forcing him to find another way to his destination. He said the detour was frustrating "especially if you don't know the area and you're new to it."

Awas's frustration was shared by driver R.J. Ellis, who said the detour has tacked on time to his daily commute.

"The commute time for me to and from [work] has virtually doubled," said Ellis. - WRAL.





Thursday, February 11, 2016

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: Massive Depot Fire In New Jersey - Billowing Plume Of Smoke Caused Police To Shut Down US Route 206! [PHOTOS + VIDEO]

A massive fire that has closed Route 206 and can be seen for miles throughout the region is still burning out of control at the Veterans Industrial Park on Route 206.

February 11, 2016 - NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES - Massive plumes of black smoke rose from a Hillsborough, New Jersey industrial park. Firefighters are on the scene.

The fire is reported to have erupted around 3:10 at Veterans Industrial Park, which is located on Route 206.

Multiple fire trucks and dozens of firefighters from the Hillsborough Township Volunteer Fire Company could arrived at the scene.










Strong winds pushed the thick black smoke miles eastward far from the scene of the fire.

The park contains warehouses and rail.

The billowing plume of smoke caused police to shut down US Route 206 between Dukes Parkway West and Camplain Road, according to Hillsborough Patch.






A photo posted by NortheastBravest.com ™ (@buffinjobs) on









Hillsborough’s mayor said that the fire currently poses no risk to the town’s residents.

Veterans Industrial Park was a former stockpile depot where 2,800 tons of mercury used stored, which was 60 percent of the nation’s stockpile, according to MyCentralJersey.com.


WATCH: Massive fire still burning at Hillsborough industrial park.




It has since converted into industrial space, with warehouses and a rail depot.

The blaze reached 5th-alarm status, the most serious category that fire departments typically have. - RT.





WORLD WAR Z: Plagues & Pestilences - Miscarriages Reported In 2 United States Women With Zika Virus, CDC Says!

Miscarriages reported in 2 U.S. women with Zika virus, CDC says

February 11, 2016 - UNITED STATES - Two U.S. women who contracted the Zika virus while traveling out of the country miscarried after returning home, and the virus was found in their placentas, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.

Federal health officials have not previously reported miscarriages in American travelers infected with the mosquito-borne virus while abroad. But there have been miscarriages reported in Brazil, the epicenter of a Zika epidemic that now spans nearly three dozen countries. Researchers in Salvador, Brazil's third largest city, are investigating some miscarriages and still births at three maternity hospitals for possible links to Zika.The STAT website first reported the U.S. miscarriages, based on information from the CDC's chief pathologist. The pathologist told STAT the women miscarried early in their pregnancies but provided no additional details.Last month, officials said a baby born in a Hawaii hospital was the first in the country with a birth defect linked to Zika. Hawaii officials said the baby's mother likely contracted the virus while living in Brazil last year and passed it on while her child was in the womb. Babies born with this rare condition, known as microcephaly, have abnormally small heads and brain abnormalities.

In cases when women have one or two miscarriages, the cause is usually severe chromosomal problems, experts say. "It's absolutely possible for an infection, whether it be viral or bacterial, to result in a miscarriage," said Zev Williams, an obstetrician-gynecologist who specializes in pregnancy loss at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Montefiore Medical Center in New York. "Whether it was caused by Zika remains to be determined," he said, but urged individuals to take precautions to avoid contracting or transmitting the virus.


Most major U.S. airlines and some cruise lines are allowing concerned customers change travel plans due to the Zika virus. (AP)


Some virus infections in pregnancy, like Rubella or German measles infections especially early in pregnancy, can spread from the mother and infect the cells of the fetus and cause direct injury to it, said Jesse Goodman, an infectious diseases doctor at Georgetown University.

In testimony before Congress Wednesday, CDC Director Tom Frieden reiterated that the agency is learning more about Zika every day, including how it can be transmitted from mother to fetus. Increasing evidence in Brazil also is linking Zika to microcephaly and other suspected neurological complications.

More than four dozen Zika cases have been confirmed in 14 states and the District of Columbia -- six involving pregnant women -- with at least another 21 cases in U.S. territories, the CDC said last Friday. Frieden also said that one U.S. case of Guillain-Barré syndrome may be linked to Zika.It was unclear whether the two miscarriages were counted among the six cases involving pregnant women.

Global health officials are closely monitoring the spread of the virus and the incidence of suspected neurological complications. Frieden has said the link between Zika and Guillain-Barré, which can lead to paralysis in adults, is growing stronger. Several South American countries have identified cases of the syndrome.


WATCH:
The Zika virus, explained.




The World Health Organization, which has designated the outbreak a "global public health emergency," issued guidance Wednesday on how women should protect themselves against possible sexual transmission of Zika. It said that until more is known, "all men and women living in or returning from an area where Zika is present -- especially pregnant women and their partners -- should be counseled on the potential risks of sexual transmission and ensure safe sexual practices."

Those include the correct and consistent use of condoms, the WHO said.

Last week the CDC issued its own detailed recommendations for preventing sexual transmission of the virus, including the suggestion that men who have traveled to Zika-affected regions consider abstaining from sex with their pregnant partner for the duration of the pregnancy. The guidelines came after a Dallas resident was infected by having sex with a person who had contracted the disease while traveling in Venezuela. - Washington Post.