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Chile earthquake of 2010

Chile earthquake of 2010
Pedestrians survey a building in Concepción, Chile, that was badly damaged in the magnitude-8.8 earthquake that struck the country in February 2010. View All Media
Date
  • February 7, 2010
Location
Topic

Chile earthquake of 2010, severe earthquake that occurred on February 27, 2010, off the coast of south-central Chile, causing widespread damage on land and initiating a tsunami that devastated some coastal areas of the country. Together, the earthquake and tsunami were responsible for more than 500 deaths.

    Earthquake and tsunami

    The magnitude-8.8 earthquake struck at 3:34 am. The epicentre was located some 200 miles (325 km) southwest of the Chilean capital of Santiago, and the focus occurred at a depth of about 22 miles (35 km) below the surface of the Pacific Ocean. The earthquake—resulting from the rupture of a 300- to 375-mile (500- to 600-km) stretch of the fault that separates the South American Plate from the subducting Nazca Plate—was felt as far away as São Paolo, Brazil, and Buenos Aires, Argentina. A 2014 study contended that water pressure built up between the two plates had been the catalyst. The initial event was succeeded in the following weeks by hundreds of aftershocks, many of them of magnitude 5.0 or greater. The temblor was the strongest to strike the region since the magnitude-9.5 event of 1960, considered to be the most powerful earthquake ever recorded. (See Chile earthquake of 1960.)

    • Map depicting the intensity of shaking experienced during the Chile earthquake, Feb. 27, 2010.
      Map depicting the intensity of shaking experienced during the Chile earthquake, Feb. 27, 2010.
      Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

    Because the region’s violent tectonic history had made it a focus of seismological study and monitoring, extant GPS sensors installed in Chile and neighbouring countries allowed the detection of subtle shifts in the location of cities, including Concepción and even Buenos Aires, as a result of the quake. A NASA computer model ascertained that the powerful force of the subducting plate had shifted Earth’s axis sufficiently to shorten the day by more than a microsecond. A study of the aftershocks released in 2014 indicated that two anomalously dense rock structures beneath the South American Plate, previously undetected, had likely slowed the rupture and, as a result, intensified shaking at the surface.

    Stress brought on by the convergence of the two tectonic plates caused rocks to shatter along the boundary between them. This forced a portion of the seabed upward, displacing the water above and triggering a tsunami. The Chilean town of Constitución was inundated by waves as high as 50 feet (15 metres), and the port of Talcahuano was damaged by a wave measuring nearly 8 feet (2.4 metres) high. Traveling across the Pacific Ocean at nearly 450 miles (725 km) per hour, the tsunami encountered the Juan Fernández Islands, located approximately 420 miles (675 km) off the coast of Chile. Although observers on the largest of the Juan Fernández Islands reported waves as high as 10 feet (3 metres), the tsunami weakened significantly before it reached the coasts of California, Hawaii, New Zealand, and Japan over the next several hours.

    • Boats run aground by the 7.7-foot (2.3-metre) tsunami that resulted from a magnitude-8.8 earthquake two days before, downtown Talcahuano, Chile, March 1, 2010.
      Boats run aground by the 7.7-foot (2.3-metre) tsunami that resulted from a magnitude-8.8 earthquake …
      Martin Bernetti—AFP/Getty Images

    A study published in August 2014 noted that the temblor triggered small earthquakes in Antarctica. It was the first direct evidence that earthquakes could trigger secondary seismic events in the Antarctic’s ice sheets.

    Damage

    Though damage to structures within the zone of the earthquake was likely limited by stringent building codes instituted in the wake of the 1960 earthquake and revised several times during the 1990s, many buildings still sustained significant damage, including nearly 400,000 homes. Particularly affected were Maule and Biobío, two first-order administrative districts along Chile’s southern coast. Large areas of Biobío were left without major services, including water, electricity, and gas, and the tall buildings of Concepción—the capital of the district and one of Chile’s largest cities—were among those most severely damaged. Copper production—a major contributor to Chile’s economy—was halted at several mines, though it resumed after limited power was restored the day after the quake. The weakened state of the electrical grid became apparent when large swathes of the country—including Santiago, which had already endured a week without power following the catastrophe—were faced with a daylong blackout in mid-March after a major transformer failed.

    Chilean government officials estimated that two million people had been directly affected by the quake. The Chilean National Emergency Office—initially responsible for documenting the casualties—estimated that more than 800 had died. However, as the Interior Ministry reviewed the data in the following weeks, the official total fluctuated significantly as missing persons were located and computational errors were discovered, leading to a reduction of the death toll by hundreds. Official tallies ultimately attributed more than 500 deaths to the disaster; 150 of those casualties were caused by the tsunami. Most fatalities occurred in the Maule district, with further deaths occurring in Biobío and in coastal and island areas damaged by the tsunami. In Concepción the limited availability of food and gasoline led to widespread looting—a phenomenon that later expanded to nonessential items such as televisions—and the consequent arrest of several dozen people. Chilean Pres. Michelle Bachelet arranged for food retailers to distribute necessities free of charge by the next day, but sporadic theft continued into the week as assistance proved slow to arrive. Isolated areas were particularly vulnerable to looting as the need for supplies became increasingly acute.

    • People taking supplies from a supermarket, Pueco, Chile, Feb. 28, 2010.
      People taking supplies from a supermarket, Pueco, Chile, Feb. 28, 2010.
      Martin Bernetti—AFP/Getty Images

    Reconstruction

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    The Chilean army dispatched more than 10,000 troops to the devastated areas around the epicentre to direct recovery operations and keep the peace the day after the quake. Though Bachelet initially stated that Chile would not require assistance from other countries, she later requested United Nations aid and accepted offers of money and supplies from the United States, the European Union, and several Asian countries. At the time of the earthquake, only two weeks from ceding power to her successor, Sebastián Piñera, Bachelet was beset by criticism that her initial reluctance to deploy the armed forces was a politically motivated maneuver to avoid echoing the regime of military dictator Augusto Pinochet. However, as Piñera ascended to the presidency on March 11 in a ceremony rocked by aftershocks, much of the chaos of the early days of the disaster had subsided and reconstruction efforts were under way.

    • Rescue workers entering a damaged building, Concepción, Chile, Feb. 28, 2010.
      Rescue workers entering a damaged building, Concepción, Chile, Feb. 28, 2010.
      Daniel Garcias—AFP/Getty Images

    By June more than 50,000 provisional homes had been erected, and housing subsidies had been disbursed to many who had been left without shelter. A year later some who were displaced had not yet moved to permanent accommodations, and coastal areas affected by the tsunami still struggled to recover from damage to the fishing and tourism industries. However, infrastructural repairs, including those to highways and airports, were largely complete. In July 2013 the government reported that some 74 percent of the 222,000 home-rebuilding projects it had subsidized were complete. The rest of the projects were largely complete by the middle of 2014.

    Precautions taken in the wake of the 2010 catastrophe were credited with saving lives during a magnitude-8.2 quake and tsunami that occurred in the northern part of Chile in April 2014. Some half a million people had participated in an evacuation drill in May 2012 in Valparaíso, and additional drills had been held in other coastal areas. Close to a million people were successfully evacuated from coastal regions following a tsunami alert in the wake of the 2014 temblor. Similar improvements to notification and evacuation procedures were noted during a September 2015 earthquake off the coast of Illapel.

    Legal consequences

    In May 2012 eight officials—including the director of the Chilean National Emergency Office and the director of the navy’s Hydrographic and Oceanographic Service at the time of the earthquake—were charged with negligence for ignoring tsunami warnings and failing to notify coastal residents of approaching surges. Further investigation revealed in February 2013 that the Hydrographic and Oceanographic Service had attempted to alter its logbooks to obscure the fact that warnings had been dismissed. In March 2013 a seismologist from the University of Chile reached a deal that mandated additional training, and in March 2014 a supervisor on duty at the National Emergency Office when the quake struck was sentenced to probation after pleading guilty to charges of failing to issue proper notifications. In April 2016 an agreement was reached wherein the six remaining defendants would forgo a trial and instead pay a collective 235 million pesos ($236,300) to 104 families of victims lost in the tsunami. Also that month, the Chilean government was ordered to pay the families of tsunami victims some 2.8 billion pesos ($2.7 million).

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