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1867 Java earthquake

Coordinates:8°42′S110°36′E / 8.7°S 110.6°E /-8.7; 110.6
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Earthquake in the Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia)
1867 Central Java earthquake
A damaged barracks inFort Willem I nearAmbarawa
1867 Java earthquake is located in Indonesia
1867 Java earthquake
Local dateJune 10, 1867 (1867-06-10)
Local time04:20–04:30
Magnitude7.8Mw
Epicenter8°42′S110°36′E / 8.7°S 110.6°E /-8.7; 110.6
TypeIntraslab
Areas affectedJava
Max. intensityMMI IX (Violent)
LandslidesYes
Casualties≤700 dead

The1867 Central Java earthquake occurred on June 10 at between 04:20 and 04:30 local time.[1][2] It struck off the southern coast of the Indonesian island with an estimatedmoment magnitude of 7.8 (Mw ). Widespread devastation occurred in Central Java, where as many as 700 people were killed. The intermediate-depthintraslab earthquake did not cause atsunami.

The Sewu temple ruins

Tectonic setting

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Off the southern coast of Java lies an activeconvergent boundary that separates theSunda Plate to the north and theAustralian Plate in the south. At the boundary, marked by theSunda Trench, the northward-moving Australian Platesubducts beneath the Sunda Plate. The subduction zone is capable of generating earthquakes of up to magnitude 8.7, while the Australian Plate may also host deeper earthquakes within the downgoinglithosphere (intraslab earthquakes) beneath the coast of Java. The subduction zone produced two destructive earthquakes and tsunamis in2006 and1994. Anintraslab earthquake in 2009 also caused severe destruction.[3]

Earthquake

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Themainshock may have been accompanied by a less intense but significantforeshock on May 17, 1865, and anaftershock on March 28, 1875, respectively. These events are thought to represent seismic unrest within the subducting Australian Plate.Simulation models of a shallow crustal and large subduction zone earthquake were inconsistent with the historical reports. The lack of an observed tsunami disproves the subduction zone earthquake theory, while the shallow crustal earthquake theory is not in alignment with the tectonic understanding of the island. Modelling an intraslab earthquake of magnitude 7.8 at a depth of 80 km (50 mi) agrees with the reports of widespread, high-intensity, and heavy damage.[4]

Damage

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The Taman Sari after the earthquake

The earthquake was felt fromBanten, in the western part of Java, toNegara, Bali, a distance of 900 km (560 mi). It was most destructive in the central and eastern parts of Java. An estimated Modified Mercalli intensity of VIII–IX (Severe–Violent) was assigned inYogyakarta.[5] Shaking was felt for over two minutes in some areas.[4][6]

InSurakarta and Yogyakarta, approximately 372 homes were destroyed or heavily damaged. A total of 1,000 homes were destroyed. TheKraton Ngayogyakarta Hadiningrat was heavily damaged. Several buildings in theTaman Sari palace complex were destroyed. Water features in the area were drained. The damaged complex eventually became a place for squatters to reside in.[7] TheSewu temple in Klaten suffered a complete collapse of its main dome structure.[8] Despite the extent of damage, only five fatalities were reported, though it may be as high as 327,[9] 500 or 700.[4][6] In Surakarta, at least 236 people were killed. Twelve of the fatalities were Europeans. Four people were killed by collapsing stone construction at a camp in thePekalongan Regency. Great damage was also reported inBantul. At Salatiga, the earthquake caused a clock to stop at the time of its occurrence: 04:21, but the shaking lasted until 04:22.

OnMount Merapi, many landslides were triggered.[5] Groundfissures were also observed. In theJava Sea, aseaquake was observed but there were no reports of a tsunami.[9] Moderate damage to factory and industrial facilities was reported in Bandjardjawa. Effects from the quake were also felt on ships docked at Batavia and those located hundreds of miles away. Several houses collapsed in theSemarang Regency. InSurabaya, a church suffered cracks and a sugar factory was damaged.[4]

In the bookRaden Saleh: kehidupan dan karyanya by Werner Kraus, the death toll was in the "thousands" although no exact figure was provoded. Among the people who felt and witnessed the destruction wasAlfred Russel Wallace.[10]

Future hazard

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According to the simulation results, if an earthquake of the same intensity occurred today, it is estimated to cause about 60,000 deaths.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Aardbeving".De Locomotief (in Dutch).Salatiga, Dutch East Indies. 11 June 1867.
  2. ^"Global Historical Earthquake Archive". Retrieved10 June 2022.
  3. ^Cipta, Athanasius; Cummins, Phil R.; Irsyam, Masyhur; Hidayati, Sri (2018)."Basin Resonance and Seismic Hazard in Jakarta, Indonesia".Geosciences.8 (4): 128.Bibcode:2018Geosc...8..128C.doi:10.3390/geosciences8040128.hdl:1885/251080.
  4. ^abcdGriffin, Jonathan; Nguyen, Ngoc; Cummins, Phil; Cipta, Athanasius (2019). "Historical Earthquakes of the Eastern Sunda Arc: Source Mechanisms and Intensity-Based Testing of Indonesia's National Seismic Hazard Assessment".Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.109 (1):43–65.Bibcode:2019BuSSA.109...43G.doi:10.1785/0120180085.S2CID 134096659.
  5. ^abNational Geophysical Data Center / World Data Service (NGDC/WDS): NCEI/WDS Global Significant Earthquake Database. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (1972)."Significant Earthquake Information" (Data Set). NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information.doi:10.7289/V5TD9V7K. Retrieved9 June 2022.
  6. ^abNguyen, Ngoc; Griffin, Jonathan; Cipta, Athanasius; Cummins, Phil R. (2015)."Indonesia's Historical Earthquakes: Modelled examples for improving the national hazard map".Geoscience Australia: Record. Canberra, Australia.doi:10.11636/Record.2015.023.ISSN 2201-702X. Retrieved19 June 2021.
  7. ^Oey, Eric (1997).Java, Indonesia – Periplus Adventure Guide Series. Singapore: Periplus Edition (HK) Ltd. pp. 161–164.ISBN 962-593-244-5. Retrieved10 June 2022.
  8. ^Dumarçay, Jacques (2007).Candi Sewu and Buddhist architecture of Central Java (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Kepustakaan Populer Gramedia.ISBN 978-979-91-0088-7. Retrieved30 June 2014.
  9. ^abNational Geophysical Data Center of the World Data Service (NGDC/WDS)."Global Historical Tsunami Database" (Data Set).NOAANational Centers for Environmental Information. Retrieved9 June 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^"History Today 10 June 1867: Yogyakarta Was Hit By A Great Earthquake 8.0 On The Richter Scale".Voice of Indonesia. 10 June 2022. Retrieved28 February 2024.
  11. ^Nguyen, Ngoc; Griffin, Jonathan; Cipta, Athanasius; Cummins, Phil R. (January 2015).Indonesia's Historical Earthquakes Modelled examples for improving the national hazard map (Report). 10.11636/Record.2015.023.doi:10.11636/Record.2015.023. Retrieved17 June 2022.
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