1935 Shinchiku-Taichū earthquake

The 1935 Shinchiku-Taichū earthquake occurred with a Richter magnitude of 7.1 (7.0 Mw) in April 1935 with its epicenter in Taichung, Taiwan (then Shinchiku Prefecture). It was the deadliest earthquake in Taiwan's recorded history, claiming 3,276 lives and causing extensive damage. Twelve seconds after the mainshock, an aftershock of ML 6.0 occurred, centered on Gabi Village (present-day Emei Township, Hsinchu County).

1935 Shinchiku-Taichū earthquake
UTC time1935-04-20 22:02:01
ISC event904224
USGS-ANSSComCat
Local date21 April 1935 (1935-04-21)
Local time06:02:01
Magnitude7.0 Mw[1]
Depth15 km (9 mi)
Epicenter
Areas affectedJapanese Taiwan
Casualties3,276 killed, 12,053+ injured
The Longteng Bridge in Sanyi, Miaoli County collapsed during the Shinchiku-Taichū earthquake.

Earthquake

The initial shock happened at 06:02 local time on 21 April 1935. The epicentre was in the village of Sansa (三叉), Byōritsu District, Shinchiku Prefecture (modern-day Sanyi, Miaoli), with the quake measuring 7.1 on the Richter magnitude scale. The quake was felt all over Taiwan apart from Hengchun on the southern tip of the island, as well as in Fuzhou and Xiamen, China, across the Taiwan Strait.[2] Soil liquefaction was observed in various locations, and a 3 m (10 ft) drop between the two sides of the fault was in evidence at Gabi Village.[3] The most serious damage from the quake was located in Shinchiku Prefecture and Taichū Prefecture (present-day Miaoli County and Taichung) over a 135 square kilometres (52 sq mi) area.[2]

A number of aftershocks followed the main quake, with the largest registering 6.0 with an epicentre at Gabi.

Damage

The earthquake was the deadliest in Taiwan's recorded history. The official reports cite the following figures for deaths, injuries and damage:

  • Deaths: 3,276
  • Injuries: 12,053
  • Houses destroyed: 17,907
  • Houses damaged: 36,781

The infrastructure of the island also sustained severe damage, with transportation, communications, and water networks heavily compromised.[4]

Reported portents

Residents in central Taiwan reported that several days before the earthquake there were "signs in the sky" of impending disaster, while locals from Kiyomizu Town, Taichū Prefecture (modern-day Qingshui, Taichung) near the epicentre, reported water boiling in ground wells an hour before the shock.[5]

Response

The great number of casualties in the earthquake prompted a review of safety standards, with the colonial Japanese government implementing building codes of a similar standard to those in force in Japan in the wake of the disaster.[4] Locals were apparently appreciative of the efforts of Japanese policemen in recovering bodies, given local superstitions against touching the dead.[4]

gollark: Also the standard for 12V-only power supplies.
gollark: <@273751268244193281> There are PicoPSU thingies which just convert 12V input to the other voltages a computer needs, but they are probably too low-power for high-end computers.
gollark: A B450 board would probably work too, and RX 480s are quite outdated by now.
gollark: You should probably pick a CPU before trying to pick a board based on of all things RAM speed.
gollark: <@273751268244193281> Those aren't even the same socket.

See also

Notes

  1. "M 7.0 - Taiwan". earthquake.usgs.gov. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  2. Sen & Wu (1996), p. 18.
  3. 1935年新竹-台中地震 [The 1935 Hsinchu-Taichung Earthquake] (in Chinese). Central Weather Bureau. Archived from the original on 2009-08-11. Retrieved 2009-08-08.
  4. Hsieh, Catherine (26 Oct 2001). "The historical impact of earthquake damage on Taiwan society and culture". Taiwan Journal. Archived from the original on 2016-07-01. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
  5. Sen & Wu (1996), p. 17.

References

  • Sen, Xuanxiong; Wu, Ruiyun (1996). 台灣大地震:1935年中部大震災紀實 [Great Taiwan Earthquake: The 1935 Central Taiwan Earthquake Disaster Report]. Taipei: Yuan Liou. ISBN 957-32-2793-2.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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