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1933 Kos earthquake

Coordinates: 36°45′32″N 27°17′56″E / 36.759°N 27.299°E / 36.759; 27.299
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1933 Kos earthquake
1933 Kos earthquake is located in Aegean Sea
1933 Kos earthquake
UTC time1933-04-23 05:57:34
ISC event905533
USGS-ANSSComCat
Local date23 April 1933 (1933-04-23)
Magnitude6.4 Mw
Depth15 km (9.3 mi)
Epicenter36°45′32″N 27°17′56″E / 36.759°N 27.299°E / 36.759; 27.299
Areas affectedGreece, Turkey
Max. intensityMMI X (Extreme)
TsunamiNone
Casualties181+ fatalities

The 1933 Kos earthquake struck the Aegean Sea region on 23 April. It measured Mw  6.4 and had an epicenter offshore, near Kos, Greece. The earthquake collapsed many buildings on Kos, Nisyros and other islands. At least 181 people were killed with a possible death toll reaching several hundred.

Tectonic setting

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Geologic map of Anatolia and the Aegean region

The eastern Mediterranean Sea is a region of dynamic plate interactions involving the Eurasian and Aftican plates—dominated by the North Anatolian Fault and Hellenic subduction zone. The Aegean Sea is a seismically active and complex area in the eastern Mediterranean Sea that experiences frequent large earthquakes and tsunamis. The Aegean Sea plate formed between the divergent boundary in Greece, separating it from the Eurasian plate; and the subduction zone in the south separating it from the African plate.[1] The east Aegean Sea is a region of extensional tectonics; around Kos, this tectonic setting formed the Kos and Gökova grabens, Quaternary submarine structures trending northeast–southwest and east–west, respectively. Earthquakes in the area are associated with normal faults that accommodates extension. Earthquakes in 1493, 1869 and 2017 caused severe damage and casualties.[2]

Earthquake

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Prior to 1933, Kos was damaged by an intermediate-depth (115 km (71 mi)) Ms  7.4 earthquake. The April 1933 earthquake had magnitudes between 6.43 and 6.70; the International Seismological Centre cataloged it at Mw  6.4.[3] The Modified Mercalli intensity on Kos ranged from VIII (Severe) to X (Extreme). Intensity IX–X (ViolentExtreme) was observed at Antimachia, Kardamaina and Kos. On Nissyros, the seismic intensity was VI–VII (StrongVery strong). On Rhodes, the earthquake was felt V–VI (ModerateStrong).[4]

Impact

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In Kos historic city center, 90 percent of homes were demolished and only some government buildings were intact. Only 50 percent of homes were decimated in the new city. The Church of Agios Nikolaos was badly damaged and has to be torn down. At Pyli, a village west of the city, there was heavy damage. Almost all homes in Antimakheia were destroyed, and the village of Kardamena was near completely ruined. On Nissyros, the villages of Emporio, Pali, Mandraki and Nikia were damaged. Slight damage also occurred at Bodrum, Turkey.[4]

The death toll ranged from 181 to several hundreds. Various press reports estimated 200–300 deaths on Kos. Only 122 victims were named. In Kos city, the death toll was reexamined to 178. Three more deaths occurred at Pyli. The number of injured was 600 to several thousand. Various press reports also stated between 20 and 100 deaths or no deaths on Nissyros.[4]

Tsunami

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The island population and mass media continues to suppose a 2–3 m (6 ft 7 in – 9 ft 10 in) tsunami struck the island but no reports exist. A newspaper reported ebb tide at Kos port for several tens of meters although it is unclear when did it occur. No coastal uplift associated with the earthquake was documented. Reports of waves likely were due to strong wind rather a tsunami associated with the earthquake.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Moshou, Alexandra (2021). "A Seismological and Geophysical Database of Kos Island: 10 Years of Digital Records". Earth. 2 (4): 920–932. Bibcode:2021Earth...2..920M. doi:10.3390/earth2040053.
  2. ^ Karasözen, Ezgi; Nissen, Edwin; Büyükakpınar, Pınar; Cambaz, Musavver Didem; Kahraman, Metin; Ertan, Esra Kalkan; Abgarmi, Bizhan; Bergman, Eric; Ghods, Abdolreza; Özacar, Atilla Arda (2018). "The 2017 July 20 M w 6.6 Bodrum–Kos earthquake illuminates active faulting in the Gulf of Gokova, SW Turkey". Geophysical Journal International. 214 (1): 185–199. doi:10.1093/gji/ggy114.
  3. ^ ISC (2022), ISC-GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1904–2018), Version 9.1, International Seismological Centre, doi:10.31905/D808B825
  4. ^ a b c d Triantafyllou, Ioanna; Papadopoulos, Gerassimos A.; Lekkas, Efthimios (2020). "Impact on built and natural environment of the strong earthquakes of April 23, 1933, and July 20, 2017, in the southeast Aegean Sea, eastern Mediterranean". Natural Hazards. 100 (2): 671–695. Bibcode:2020NatHa.100..671T. doi:10.1007/s11069-019-03832-9. S2CID 209441124.