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PacificTWC | Earthquakes of Indonesia: 2004 - 2019 @PacificTWC | Uploaded 4 years ago | Updated 2 hours ago
On 26 December 2004 the third-largest earthquake ever recorded struck the coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, with a magnitude of 9.1. It generated the deadliest tsunami in history--and one of the deadliest natural disasters--killing nearly 228,000 people in 14 countries.

Indonesia lies above a tectonic plate boundary called a “subduction zone” where the Indo-Australian Plate grinds beneath the Eurasian Plate. Subduction zones can produce megathrust earthquakes with large vertical seafloor motions that cause devastating tsunamis such as the one in 2004. This type of plate boundary can also give rise to volcanoes, and Indonesia is home to many well-known active volcanoes, such as Krakatoa, which can also generate tsunamis with their eruption and collapse.

This animation covers the 15 year period since the devastating earthquake and tsunami of 2004. It begins with a map of plate boundaries, showing the complexity of the region, and highlighting the sources of two recent, unusual tsunamis: the Palu Fault that generated a deadly local tsunami from a sideways-moving strike-slip earthquake (and possibly landslides) within a narrow inlet, and the Anak Krakatau volcano (within Krakatoa’s caldera) that collapsed during an eruption to produce another locally devastating tsunami. The animation will then show the earthquakes in sequence as they occur from 2004 through 2009, ending with a summary map showing all of the earthquakes in the animation. Some significant events that occurred during this period include:

26 December 2004 -- M9.1 -- Sumatra-Andaman Islands, source of Indian Ocean tsunami

28 March 2005 -- M8.6 -- Nias–Simeulue (Sumatra), killed more than 900 and caused a small tsunami

27 January 2006 -- M7.6 -- Banda Sea; almost 400 km deep

17 July 2006 -- M7.7 -- Pangandaran (Java); a slow-rupture earthquake with a low shaking intensity that produced a devastating tsunami, approx. 700 dead

12 September 2007 -- M7.9, M8.4, and M7.0 -- Sumatra; 23 dead, small tsunami

3 January 2009 -- M7.7 & M7.4 -- Papua; 4 dead

30 September 2009 -- M7.6 -- Sumatra; more than 1000 dead

6 April 2010 -- M7.8 -- Sumatra; small tsunami

25 October 2010 -- M7.8 -- Mentawai Islands (Sumatra); devastating local tsunami, more than 400 dead

11 April 2012 -- M8.6 & M8.2 -- Indian Ocean; largest strike-slip events ever recorded, small tsunami

2 March 2016 -- M7.8 -- Indian Ocean; strike-slip

28 September 2018 -- M7.5 -- Palu (Sulawesi); strike-slip with locally damaging tsunami, over 4000 dead (mostly from the earthquake)

22 December 2018 -- Anak Krakatau volcanic eruption and collapse causing a submarine landslide and tsunami (no significant earthquake so not visible in the animation); more than 400 dead

From 2005 to 2013 the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) provided tsunami warning services to the nations of the Indian Ocean. Today Indonesia, Australia, and India play that role.

Indonesia: http://rtsp.bmkg.go.id
Australia: http://www.bom.gov.au/tsunami/
India: https://incois.gov.in/tsunami/eqevents.jsp

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To see an animation of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, please watch:
youtu.be/n1VmbgsM-zE

To see a comparison of the relative sizes of some historic earthquakes, please watch:
youtu.be/sTvtKUb-RsY

To see how subduction zones make tsunamis, please watch:
youtu.be/UCr_8E6hXTU

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Earthquake Data Source: United States Geological Survey (USGS)/National Earthquake Information Center (NEIC) searchable catalog:
earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/search

Plate boundaries from UTIG’s PLATES project:
https://ig.utexas.edu/marine-and-tectonics/plates-project/
Earthquakes of Indonesia:  2004 - 2019Tsunami Forecast Model Animation: Samoa 2009Tsunami Forecast Model Animation: Chile 2010Tsunami Animation:  Tohoku, Japan 2011 (Mercator)30 Years of Earthquakes in Japan: 1990 - 2019Tsunami Forecast Model Animation:  Three Tsunamis in One Day From the Tonga-Kermadec Subduction ZoneTsunami Forecast Model Animation: Lisbon 1755Tsunami Animation: Hawaii 1975Tsunami Animation: Maule, Chile 2010 (rotating globe)Tsunami Forecast Model Animation: Alaska 1964A Decade of Great EarthquakesGlobal Earthquake Animation: January - April 2014

Earthquakes of Indonesia: 2004 - 2019 @PacificTWC

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