Queensland rocked by biggest earthquake in 20 years

By on 19 August, 2016

north-queensland-earthquake-700

Areas of the Queensland yesterday experienced a 5.8 magnitude tremor, Queensland’s largest in 20 years.

The earthquake occurred approximately 70km offshore from Bowen in north Queensland at 2:30pm.  A series of magnitude three aftershocks in the same region occurred in the following hours.

The quake reportedly lasted 40 seconds and was felt as far south as the Sunshine Coast. It led to evacuations of buildings in Cairns and Townsville. Geoscience Australia received more than 1,000 reports of the quake in the hours following the earthquake, however authorities have not reported any serious injuries or damage.

Maps from Geoscience Australia’s seismological web mapping service, shows the quake was one of a series of tremors in the region over the past 24 hours. The series of earthquakes was actually in a very similar locations to a series of earthquakes that occurred west of Bowen in 2011, which including a magnitude 5.3 tremor.

Siesmologist Hugh Glanville said it was a nationally “significant” quake and the “biggest earthquake in Queensland in 20 years”.

“On average we get one or two earthquakes over magnitude 5 each year,” Glanville said. “We had a magnitude 6 in central Australia earlier this year but this is the biggest in Queensland in 20 years. It’s significant.”

At 5.8, the magnitude of the earthquake surpassed Australia’s most damaging earthquake, the 5.6 magnitude Newcastle earthquake on 1989, which killed 13 people and caused $4bn in damage.

Geoscience Australia senior duty seismologist Dr Jonathan Bathgate said Australia experiences on average two magnitude 5 events per year. However, with five significant events since February 2015, Dr Bathgate suggests things have been more active than usual.

Today’s magnitude 5.8 earthquake is the second strongest earthquake in recorded history in Queensland, behind a magnitude 6.0 event that occurred in 1918.” – Dr Jonathan Bathgate

“The earthquakes occur because the Australian plate is moving northward at approximately seven centimeters per year, colliding with the Pacific plate, causing stress to build up across Australia, which is released periodically by earthquakes.”

 

You may also like to read:


, ,


Newsletter

Sign up now to stay up to date about all the news from Spatial Source. You will get a newsletter every week with the latest news.

City of Sydney: Growing green with GIS
The City of Sydney has set targets to grow a cooler, more di...
Victorian Surveyor-General makes historic apology
The apology acknowledges the role that SGs played in the dis...
One year to go: Countdown to FIG 2025!
Thousands of surveyors from around the world will converge o...
LiDAR shows Pacific cities are older than once thought
LiDAR has helped to show that city structures were being bui...
PlanTech partners aim to transform urban planning
The new effort highlights technology’s role in improving p...
Dual-band GNSS platform
The u-blox F10 GNSS platform combines L1 and L5 to offer enh...