Aqa 2012 Course Unit One Case Study 2

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Case study: 2005 Kashmir Earthquake The 2005 earthquake of the Kashmir region is the 17th deadliest earthquake ever recorded, killing approximately 79,000 people from India, Pakistan and Afghanistan alike. The earthquake measured 7.6 on the Richter scale. Earthquake area [pic] Fact file When: 8th October 2005 Where: Kashmir (India, Afghanistan & Pakistan) Magnitude: 7.6 Deaths: 79,000 (totalled from primary and secondary effects of the earthquake) Injuries: 106,000 Area of destruction 31.4km² Why did it happen? [pic] The earthquake happened because the region is on a collision boundary of the Indian and Eurasian plates (the two plates that form the Himalayas). These two normally push together steadily, but when they jam the pressure builds up, and then is realised as an earthquake, such as the Kashmir quake [pic] How were the people affected? Many people had their houses destroyed, or made inaccessible, from damage. Landslides disrupted travel and emergency aid from getting to the region, and possibly causing more deaths. Fires from broken gas main could easily destroy what people had left of their belongings. Most of the buildings were flattened due to the materials they were made of and how they were built (without foundations or to be able to move with the shock waves). The two worst areas effected Balakot, Pakistan: The small tribal city was just a few miles from the epicentre of the earthquake. The result was the place was flattened, and caused the only two deaths in Pakistan. The Pakistani government has since rebuilt the city 20 miles north of the old site, with quake proof buildings Uri, India: 1500 people died in this town alone Effects (short and long term) |Short term |Long term |

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