EARTH QUAKES, TSUNAMIS AND CONTINENTAL DRIFT
N.Nandhivarman
Tsunami hit Pondicherry
recently and people were taken aback at its ferocity. The least expected
unfolding of the Nature’s fury has stirred a debate on the changes in our
coastline. Why did it happen and how it happened are subjects of current
debate. Earth’s surface rests divided into 12 plates. Now the 13 th plate is in
the offing. Throughout history scientists believe continents to be drifting,
moving closer, or breaking from one another. Pangaea, the most recent
super-continent on Earth began to break 160 million years ago. Paul Hoffman,
Professor of Geology at Harvard University opines that while Pangaea broke up the
Atlantic Ocean opened splitting North America from Eurasia .
Then North America parted from Eurasia subsequently South America from Africa, Australia ,
Antarctica and India
separated from Africa creating the Indian Ocean .
The same scholar says, “Atlantic and Indian
Oceans continue to widen
while Pacific gets smaller. In 100 million years North America and Asia will probably drift into each other”. Paul Hoffman
had already named the new super-continent as Amasia.
Jeffrey Welssel at Columbia
University ’s Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory says, “The result of this crucial stage in the collision between India and Asia
is the breakup of the Indo Australian Plate into separate Indian and Australian
plates”. He also said “ In The Central Indian Ocean Nature is conducting a
large scale experiment for us, showing us what happens to oceanic lithosphere
(earth’s outer layer) when a force is applied.” This experiment had its
repercussions, when on fault lines earthquakes hit almost exactly where Indo
Australian plates have broken.
Group of researchers from NASA’s Goddard Space
Flight Center
have provided with schematic global tectonic activity map, which shows several
types of faults, active spreading centers, and volcanoes. The fault-lines or
geo fractures are areas where we must watch and take all precautions in
constructions to save lives.
This may be a global watch, but Pondicherrian’s have
specific areas to observe. A Report on Ground Water Survey and Exploration in
the Union Territory of Pondicherry and its environs by a team of experts from
Central Ground Water Board, Southern region in March 1973 says that “The
photo-geological study has also confirmed the existence of the fault to the
west of the coastline a straight scarp running almost parallel to Pondicherry-
Markanam Road” That finding was made three decades ago.
Dr.S.M.Ramasamy Director of Center for Remote Sensing
of Bharathidasan University as early as 1993 said, “The East North East- West
South West trending faults on the contrary are showing left handed (sinistrel)
ongoing translational movements. Such sinisterly and dextrally moving faults display
definite morph tectonic anomalies in the remotely sensed data and also in the
field. In addition, there is a conspicuous land subsidence between Pondicherry in the North
East and Cumbum valley in the South West.
One such graben has been established along north east-
southwest trending faults in between Pondicherry-Cuddalore in the northeast and
Cumbum valley in the Southwest. It is significant to observe that the
earthquake epicenters fall along such NE-SW trending fault in Cuddalore,
Ariyalor, Dindigul and Kodaikanal.
In view of a geo-fracture i.e. fault line from Kalapet
in Pondicherry to Cumbum Valley
in South Tamil Nadu, great caution must be taken in construction of high rise
structures wherever fault lines have been identified. Earthquake resistant
construction design in places where one fault line passes, as mentioned above,
is need of the hour. There are pictures taken by satellites using remote
sensing techniques had identified studies covering Tamil Nadu its and various
fault lines. It is high time sky scrappers do not come up in the fault line and
quake prone areas.
While Earthquake precautions are need of the hour, the
new threat to Tamil Nadu’s coast comes by way of Tsunamis. Tsunami is a known
phenomenon in Pacific Ocean stretching from Chile
in Latin America to Japan
in Far East Asia. Seismic disturbances, coastal earthquakes, volcanic eruptions
or under sea landslides that jolt the ocean floor cause tsunamis, which travels
at speeds up to 500 miles per hour and reaches heights between 50 and 100 feet.
Tsunami observatories and Earth Quake observatories must be set up for early
warning systems. People living in low-lying coastal areas have faced the brunt.
“It is high time fishermen settlements are shifted to higher grounds. World
Bank and global assistance that is forthcoming must be utilized to create
fishermen colonies in high ground ’’opines Narambai Kanagasabai, President of
Narambai Fishermen Panchayat of Pondicherry state.
The green house effect causes rise in sea water
levels. Scientists have predicted that by 2100 A.D the rise in sea level will
be between 0.5 to 1.5 meters. Before 1.5 million years Sea was closer to Madurai and before 90,000 years Chennai, Pondicherry and Vedaranyam were surrounded by
sea. Due to fall in sea levels 65,000 years ago India
and Ceylon
joined and when sea level rose around 27,000 years ago they parted. Then 17,000
years ago due to fall in water level both joined and when water rose they
parted. This is the study-report of Bharathidasan
University ’s Earth
Sciences Department. All these studies and past history makes it clear that our
coastline had undergone changes over centuries. Poompuhar of Chola Empire is
beneath the seas. Sirkazhi once a coastal town is now an interior town. So changes
in our coast are continuous. Caution must be taken about all dwellings in our
coast, and let this tsunami attack be an eye opener.
[Courtesy: New Indian Express
dated: 1st January 2005]
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