1940 Vrancea earthquake
UTC time | ?? |
---|---|
Magnitude | 7.4 MGR, 7.7 Mw[1] |
Depth | 133 km[2] |
Epicenter | 45°45′11″N 26°55′55″E / 45.753°N 26.932°E |
Areas affected | Romania, Moldova |
Total damage | 65,000 homes destroyed |
Max. intensity | X (intense)[1][3] |
Landslides | Yes |
Foreshocks | 6.5 Mw (22 October, 8:37 am) |
Aftershocks | 5.5 Mw (11 November, 8:34 am)[4] |
Casualties | 1,000 dead, 4,000 injured (USGS) 593 dead, 1,271 injured (URBAN-INCERC) |
The 1940 Vrancea earthquake, also known as the 1940 Bucharest earthquake, (Romanian: Cutremurul din 1940) occurred on Sunday, 10 November 1940, in Romania, at 3:39 am (local time), when the majority of the population was at home.
The 1940 earthquake registered a magnitude of 7.7 on the Richter scale, being the strongest earthquake recorded in the 20th century in Romania.[6] Its epicenter lay in Vrancea zone at a depth of about 133 km. The pleistoseist area of this earthquake was of 80,000 km²[3] and the macroseismic effects were felt on a surface of over 2,000,000 km²,[2] being reported on vast areas, thus: in the north up to Saint Petersburg, at over 1,300 km,[7] where there have been estimated seismic intensities of IV–V (MCS degrees), in the south, up to Greece, in the east, up to the Kharkiv–Moscow line, with estimated intensities of V–VI (MCS degrees), in the west, up to Belgrade, Budapest, Warsaw.
Background
1940 was characterized by a very high seismic activity in Vrancea.[8] In the first months of 1940 there were earthquakes of magnitude 4.5–5 that occurred at depths of 130–160 km. On 24 June, there was an earthquake of magnitude 5.5 at a depth of 115 km, scarcely felt in Wallachia and Moldavia.[8] There followed a period of relative calmness until 3 October, when an earthquake of magnitude 4.7–5.0 occurred at a depth of 150 km.[9]
On the evening of 21 October, there were many earthquakes, of which the most important took place around midnight at a depth of 100 km (M=4.5). On the morning of 22 October, at 8:37 am, a stronger earthquake occurred in Vrancea, of magnitude 6.5 and maximum intensity of VII on the Mercalli intensity scale, at a depth of 122–125 km;[10] this quake was strongly felt, especially in Wallachia and Moldavia. Only light damage, for example, cracks in walls and broken windows, was reported, but no casualties.[9] This earthquake did not have immediate after shocks.
At the beginning of November there were, however, several earthquakes over 4.0 at about 140–150 km depth.[8] On 8 November, at 2 pm., less than two days before the catastrophic earthquake, there was another earthquake of magnitude 5.5 at a depth of 145 km, which was also felt in Bucharest.[9] A day later, in the afternoon of 9 November there were several weak and local earthquakes, around the town of Panciu, movements which passed almost unnoticed by the population (II–III degrees on the Mercalli intensity scale).[5]
Damage
External videos | |
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Cutremurul din 10 noiembrie 1940 on YouTube | |
Землетрясение в Кишинёве, 1940 г. on YouTube | |
Rumanian Earthquake on British Pathé |
The earthquake's effects were devastating in central and southern Moldova and Walachia. The number of casualties was estimated at 1,000 dead while 4,000 are believed to have been injured, mostly in Moldova. Because of the context in which it occurred, the exact number of victims was not known as this kind of information was censored during the war.
The earthquake was felt in Bucharest, where 267 people were killed in the collapse of Carlton Bloc,[11][12] a 14-story reinforced concrete structure, the tallest building in the city at the time. After the earthquake, the basement was engulfed in flames which hampered the intervention of rescue teams.[10] Almost all ceilings of the concert halls collapsed. The American Embassy, the Post's hotel, the building of the Ministry of Agriculture and that of the General Staff were reported destroyed.[6] According to the documents of the National Firefighters Museum, 185 buildings completely collapsed in Bucharest, and another 412 were seriously damaged.[6] The Romanian General Association of Engineers undertook a detailed study of earthquake effects on reinforced concrete buildings.[13] The main conclusion was that the guidelines used for constructing reinforced concrete buildings, did not take into account possible seismic movement. Following the study, new rules were developed and applied to all postwar buildings.
Focșani, a city 150 kilometres (93 mi) northeast of Bucharest and the epicentre of the quake, was reported in ruins;[9] Panciu was destroyed in 90%,[2] although most of the buildings were made of wood, while the number of casualties is uncertain (22 to 62 deaths, 54 to 300 injured);[14] Galați, the site of the German submarine base, also suffered severely; and Giurgiu, the principal oil port on the Danube, saw public buildings and factories completely destroyed. In Câmpina, a densely populated oil town, refinery chimneys toppled, houses collapsed, and pipelines burst, dousing the ground with a sticky and inflammable threat. In the heavily guarded Ploiești, a few field fires broke out, but were later reported extinguished. In Chișinău were reported 78 deaths and 2,795 affected buildings, of which 172 destroyed.
The earthquake also caused significant morphological effects in the earth's crust, especially in the sub-Carpathian regions of Wallachia and Moldavia; these effects manifested by landslides, fissures, settlements, formation of cracks in the surface layers of the crust, water spurting from cracks formed alongside rivers. According to recorded testimonies, luminous phenomena were observed, both in the epicentral area and in regions that are far away from the epicenter.[15]
Controversial death toll
Initial dispatches, reported casualties that were based on sketchy evidence, however on the second day official reports gave 267 killed and 476 injured all over the country until the evening of 10 November.[16] After the emergency response phase, Tillotson (1940) gave many details of the effects of the earthquake around the country and said that due to telecommunications still interrupted a conservative estimate would place the casualties at 400 killed and 800 severely injured in Romania, with more than 150 killed in Bucharest where 30 or more were still trapped under the debris of Carlton and more than one thousand badly damaged houses had to be evacuated. Time magazine (1940) said that about 98 bodies were extricated from under Carlton debris, while there were 357 killed and thousands injured in all the country.[16]
In 1982, the published memoirs of the vice-premier of Romania at the time of the event, indicated 593 killed and 1,271 injured in all the country, and in Bucharest 140 killed from the 226 occupants of Carlton block, with another 300 injured in the city.[16] The rest of the country's casualties were mostly in masonry buildings. Near the epicenter, the city of Focșani and the town of Panciu were heavily damaged and many lives were lost. The cities of Galați and Ploiești were seriously affected, as was the region of Muntenia.
In a research conducted by the National Research and Development Institute URBAN-INCERC, the death toll stands at 593, while 1,271 were injured.[16]
Location | County | Dead | Injured | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Carlton Bloc | Bucharest | 140 | 86 | Assuming 226 occupants |
Various locations | Bucharest | Some | 300 | |
Panciu | Putna | 44 | 70–190 | Rădulescu (62 dead, 300 injured); Adevărul newspaper (42 dead, 70 injured); Ziarul de Iași (42 dead, 76 injured); Nature (23 dead, 71 serious injuries) |
Focșani | Putna | 12 | 115 | Nature (70% of buildings destroyed) |
Galați | Covurlui | 34 | 40–130 | Nature (36 dead, 130 injured) |
Various locations | Covurlui | 107 | Unknown | |
Bârlad | Tutova | 12 | 20 | |
Huși | Fălciu | Few | 20 | |
Vaslui | Vaslui | Few | Few | |
Târgul Berești | Covurlui | Few | 0 | |
Tecuci | Tecuci | 19 | 20 | |
Buzău | Buzău | 20 | Unknown | |
Râmnicu Sărat | Râmnicu Sărat | 0 | 5 | |
Pătârlagele | Buzău | Few | Unknown | |
Iași | Iași | 8 | 5 | |
Câmpina | Prahova | 6 | Unknown | |
Doftana prison | Prahova | 21 | 78 | 40 seriously injured |
Ploiești | Prahova | 7 Unknown | ||
Mărgineni prison | Prahova | 4 | Unknown | |
Valea Boului | Prahova | 4 | Unknown | |
Boldești | Prahova | 3 | Unknown | |
Apostolache | Prahova | 3 | Unknown | |
Scăieni | Prahova | 2 | Unknown | |
Mălăești | Prahova | 2 | Unknown | |
Various locations | Prahova | 14 | 270 | In Bertea, Românești, Bănești, Mislea, Coțofenești, Teișani, Aluniș, etc. (1 death per location); 110 seriously and 160 lightly injured (excl. Doftana prison) |
Mizil | Buzău | Few | Few | |
Târgoviște | Dâmbovița | Few | Unknown | |
Craiova | Dolj | 5 | Few | |
Turnu Măgurele | Teleorman | 0 | Few | |
Tulcea | Tulcea | Few | Few | |
Constanța | Constanța | 0 | Few | |
Elsewhere in Romania | 94 | 360 |
See also
- 1802 Vrancea earthquake – 7.9 Mw, the strongest earthquake to ever hit Romania occurred on 26 October
- 1977 Vrancea earthquake
- 1986 Vrancea earthquake
- List of earthquakes in 1940
- List of earthquakes in Romania
- List of earthquakes in Vrancea County
References
- ^ a b Tatiana Kronrod; Mircea Radulian; Giuliano Panza; Mihaela Popa; Ivanka Paskaleva; Slavica Radovanovich; Katalin Gribovszki; Ilie Sandu; Lazo Pekevski (29 January 2012). "Integrated transnational macroseismic data set for the strongest earthquakes of Vrancea (Romania)" (PDF). Central European Initiative.
- ^ a b c Diana Scarlat (6 October 2013). "Cele două axe ale cutremurelor din România – București-Sofia și Vrancea-Chișinău". Jurnalul Național (in Romanian).
- ^ a b A. Pantea; A. P. Constantin (9 November 2009). "Reevaluated macroseismic map of Vrancea (Romania). Earthquake occurred on November 10, 1940" (PDF). Horia Hulubei National Institute of Physics and Nuclear Engineering.
- ^ Petre Țurlea (March 2009). "Cutremurul din 1940". Historia (in Romanian).
- ^ a b Elena Marinescu (28 April 2009). "Mărmureanu, contrazis: marele seism din 1940 a fost o replică!". România Liberă (in Romanian).
- ^ a b c "POVEȘTI DE BUCUREȘTI. Cutremurul din noiembrie '40, cel mai puternic din secolul XX, a durat trei minute!". Adevărul (in Romanian). 5 March 2011.
- ^ "Cutremurul din 10 noiembrie 1940 – date sintetice". INFORISX (in Romanian).
- ^ a b c Mihaela Lazarescu. "Seismic risk in Romania" (PDF). Bauhaus-Universität Weimar.
- ^ a b c d "Cutremurul vrâncean din 1940". Cutremur.net (in Romanian).
- ^ a b Romulus Cristea (10 November 2006). "Tragedia de la blocul "Carlton"". România Liberă (in Romanian).
- ^ I. Vlad; M. Vlad (October 2008). "Behavior of dwellings during strong earthquakes in Romania" (PDF). Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur.
- ^ Time.com
- ^ "Dezvăluiri de la cel mai PUTERNIC CUTREMUR din SECOLUL XX. Acum s-ar putea întâmpla la fel". Realitatea.net (in Romanian). 4 November 2013.
- ^ Cherciu, Cezar (2005). Vrancea și Ținutul Putnei: O lume de altădată 1921–1945 (in Romanian). Focșani: Andrew. p. 286. ISBN 973-87581-0-6.
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Cutremurul din 1940 – 70 de ani". Cutremur.net (in Romanian). 9 November 2010.
- ^ a b c d "Building Damage vs. Territorial Casualty Patterns during the Vrancea (Romania) Earthquakes of 1940 and 1977" (PDF). Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur. 2012.
- ^ E. S., Georgescu; A., Pomonis (15–16 November 2010). Human casualties due to the Vrancea, Romania earthquakes of 1940 and 1977: learning from past to prepare for future events. Mizunami: Mizunami International Symposium on Earthquake Casualties and Health Consequences.