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1787 New Spain earthquake

Coordinates: 16°30′N 98°30′W / 16.5°N 98.5°W / 16.5; -98.5
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1787 Mexico earthquake
1787 New Spain earthquake is located in Mexico
1787 New Spain earthquake
UTC time??
Magnitude8.6 Mw
Epicenter16°30′N 98°30′W / 16.5°N 98.5°W / 16.5; -98.5
TypeThrust
Areas affectedMexico
Tsunamiyes
Casualties11 killed in the tsunami, total unknown

The 1787 Mexico earthquake, also known as the San Sixto earthquake, occurred on 28 March at 11:30 local time (17:30 UTC). It caused a large tsunami that affected the coast of the states of Guerrero and Oaxaca in Southwestern Mexico. With an estimated magnitude of 8.6 on the moment magnitude scale it was more powerful than any instrumentally recorded Mexican earthquake.

Tectonic setting

Southwestern Mexico lies above the convergent boundary where the Cocos Plate is being subducted below the North American Plate at a rate of 6.4 cm/yr. The dip of the subducting slab is about 15° as defined by focal mechanisms and earthquake hypocenters. Seismicity in this area is characterised by regular megathrust earthquakes along the plate interface.[1]

Earthquake

The earthquake was reported as lasting between 6 and 7 minutes. It was followed by three strong aftershocks on 29 March, 30 March, and 3 April, all of which were probably of magnitude 7 or more, based on estimates of the reported intensities in the city of Oaxaca. It was felt over a wide area from Morelia to Tehuantepec along the coast and as far inland as Tulancingo.[2] The magnitude of this earthquake has been estimated from contemporary reports of seismic intensity. Analysis of other subduction interface earthquakes along this margin suggest that the extent of shaking of VIII or greater on the Mercalli intensity scale matches well with the rupture extent for each event. This suggests that the 1787 rupture extended for about 450 km along the coast, providing an estimate of magnitude 8.6, based on scaling against other similar earthquakes.[3]

Tsunami

The tsunami triggered by the earthquake affected the Mexican Pacific coast for more than 500 km along the shores of Oaxaca, Guerrero and Chiapas.[4] The maximum wave height has been estimated as 18.5 m, based on records of inundation and current elevations.[5]

Damage

The earthquake caused damage to buildings in Mexico City and many buildings in Oaxaca city were destroyed. Three churches in Teuchitlan were destroyed.[2]

Future earthquake hazard

The rupture behaviour of the subduction interface in the area of the 1787 earthquake involves occasional very large earthquakes, such as that in 1787, with smaller (M7) earthquakes rupturing just part of the plate boundary during the intervening period. Similar behaviour has been observed along the Colombia-Ecuador subduction zone, with three M7 earthquakes since the M8.8 1906 Ecuador–Colombia earthquake rupturing just part of the same area that slipped in that great earthquake.[3]

References

  1. ^ Singh, S.K.; M. Ordaz, L. Alcantara, N. Shapiro, V. Kostoglodov, J. F. Pacheco, S. Alcocer, C. Gutierrez, R. Quaas, T. Mikumo, E. Ovando, J. Aguirre, D. Almora, J. G. Anderson, M. Ayala, C. Javier, G. Castro, R. Duran, G. Espitia, J. Estrada, E. Guevara, J. Lermo, B. Lopez, O. Lopez, M. Macias, E. Mena, M. Ortega, C. Perez, J. Perez, M. Romo, M. Ramirez, C. Reyes, R. Ruiz, H. Sandoval, M. Torres, E. Vazquez, R. Vazquez, J. M. Velasco, and J. Ylizaturri,. "The Oaxaca earthquake of 30 September 1999 (MW = 7.5)" (PDF). Seismological Research Letters. 71 (1): 67–78. doi:10.1785/gssrl.71.1.67. Retrieved 30 December 2011.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b "Comments for the Significant Earthquake". The Significant Earthquake Database. National Geophysical Data Center. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  3. ^ a b Suárez G. & Albini P. (2009). "Evidence for Great Tsunamigenic Earthquakes ( M 8.6) along the Mexican Subduction Zone" (PDF). Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 99 (2a): 892–896. doi:10.1785/0120080201.
  4. ^ "The Great 1787 Corralero, Oaxaca, Tsunami Uncovered". AGU. May 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  5. ^ Núñez-Cornú F.J., Ortiz M. & Sánchez J.J. (2008). "The great 1787 Mexican tsunami". Natural Hazards. 47 (3): 569–576. doi:10.1007/s11069-008-9239-1.