2009 Xinjiang earthquake

The 2009 Xinjiang earthquake occurred in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of the People's Republic of China. It occurred at 9:47 a.m in Qapqal on January 25, 2009.[1]

2009 Xinjiang earthquake
UTC time2009-01-25 01:47:47
ISC eventn/a
USGS-ANSSComCat
Local date25 January 2009 (2009-01-25)
Local time09:47:47 CST
Magnitude5.1 Mw(usgs)
Depth10 kilometres (6.2 mi)
Epicenter43.3°N 80.9°E / 43.3; 80.9
TypeDip-slip (reverse)
Areas affectedChina
Total damage$US 3.1 million

Location

The epicenter was at 43.3 degrees north latitude and 80.9 degrees east longitude at a depth of 10 km according to the China Earthquake Administration. The quake occurred 700 km from the regional capital Ürümqi.[1]

Damage

It has affected more than 4,500 people and caused house collapses and other damage. In total, 4,549 people in the Xibe Autonomous County of Qapqal and Zhaosu County were affected. They have been relocated to schools, government buildings and tents, said a regional civil affairs department official. No casualties have been reported so far.[1]

A total of 198 houses collapsed and 2,928 were damaged. The direct economic loss was estimated at 21 million yuan ($US 3.1 million).[1]

Zodiac

According to the Chinese zodiac the Xinjiang earthquake occurred on the last day of the year of the Rat. Previously the year of the Rat was known as a negative year for China including the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, 2008 Tibetan unrest, 2008 milk scandal and many more events.[2]

gollark: I mean, technically it would be multinomial probably, but you can treat it as binomial for just "6" or "not 6".
gollark: This sounds like you can just abuse binomial distributions.
gollark: And please escape your `*`s.
gollark: - does not actually contain any `=` so not an equation- contains two unknowns while there's just one not-actually-equation- that's all really
gollark: I'm pretty sure that's impossible for SEVERAL reasons.

See also

References

  1. Xinhuanet.com. "Xinhuanet.com." More than 4,500 people affected in NW China earthquake. Retrieved on 2009-01-26.
  2. NYtimes. "NYtimes.com." Chinese Hope for Bullish Year of the Ox. Retrieved on 2009-01-26.
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