Transcript Slide 1
Magnitude 7.3 OFFSHORE HONDURAS
Thursday, May 26, 2009 at 08:24:45 UTC
A strong quake measuring 7.3 struck offshore from the Central American country
of Honduras early Thursday. This earthquake killed at least six people, injured at
least 40, damaged homes and caused damage in neighboring Guatemala.
Additionally, this earthquake briefly triggered a tsunami alert for Central America’s
Caribbean coast.
The population in this
region resides in structures
that are vulnerable to
earthquake shaking.
"It is not alarming, it is not
a calamity. For the type of
earthquake it was, the
damage is minor,"
Honduran President
Manuel Zelaya told local
radio.
Magnitude 7.3 OFFSHORE HONDURAS
Thursday, May 26, 2009 at 08:24:45 UTC
This map below shows historic
earthquake activity near the epicenter
(gold star) from 1990 to present.
Previous strong earthquakes along
the North America/Caribbean plate
boundary include the destructive
Guatemala earthquake of February 4,
1976, M 7.5, which produced more
than 23,000 fatalities.
Honduras has additional seismic
hazard from the subduction zone off
the country’s west coast.
Magnitude 7.3 OFFSHORE HONDURAS
Thursday, May 26, 2009 at 08:24:45 UTC
This map shows the rates and directions of motion of the Cocos, Pacific, and
Caribbean plates with respect to the North American Plate. The small arrows on the
Caribbean Plate show that it moves eastward at a rate of about 20 mm/yr (2
cm/year) with respect to the North American Plate. This is a fairly slow rate of
transform (side-by-side) motion between the Caribbean and North American plates.
For comparison, the rate of transform motion across the San Andreas transform
fault between the North American and Pacific plates is about 50 mm/yr (5 cm/yr).
North American Plate
Caribbean Plate
Pacific
Plate
Cocos Plate
Magnitude 7.3 OFFSHORE HONDURAS
Thursday, May 26, 2009 at 08:24:45 UTC
This earthquake occurred on the transform plate boundary between the Caribbean
and North American plates. As expected for an earthquake on a transform boundary,
the depth of the event was quite shallow at about 10 km.
Transform faults occur where plates slide past each other, and crust is neither
destroyed nor created.
Another example of a transform fault fault is the San Andreas in California which
runs from the Mendocino Triple Junction in the north to the Imperial Valley in the
south.
Transform Faulting
Magnitude 7.3 OFFSHORE HONDURAS
Thursday, May 26, 2009 at 08:24:45 UTC
Earthquake
Seismometers
Magnitude 7.3 OFFSHORE HONDURAS
Thursday, May 26, 2009 at 08:24:45 UTC
Quick Time Required
Animation of the seismic waves travelling from the Honduras earthquake to Portland, Oregon