The Geological Setting of Nepal and Why it is Earthquake Prone

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

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USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…The recent earthquake in Nepal that has killed thousands of people took place in one of the most seismically active areas on earth.

 
The Himalaya, Nepal's major mountain terrain, is being formed as the Tibetan/Eurasian plate collides with the Indian plate as the Indian plate moves northward as shown on this diagram:
 
The geological framework of the Himalayas can be simply thought of as two continents colliding with each other, resulting in one continent pushing up another.   As the stresses of the collision build, they are released as earthquakes along the multitude of faults that cross the region.  In many ways this process is similar to the process that formed the Cordillera of North America which most of us know as the Rocky Mountains.  In that case, a series of smaller island arcs located on the Pacific plate collided with the western margin of the North American plate, pushing the earth's crust up into a long mountain chain that runs the length of North America.
 
As the Indian plate is subducted under the Eurasian plate, it pushes the continental crust upwards, forming the formidable Himalayan plate as shown on this block diagram:
 
 
This collision results in significant shortening of the earth's crust as the earth's crust is thrusted upwards creating the Himalayan mountain chain; in the case of the Himalayan fold belt, a 2010 paper by Long et al suggests that there has been at least 344 to 405 kilometers of crustal shortening across the Himalayas.  This amounts to between 70 and 75 percent shortening.

Geologists believe that the Himalayan Range is one of the younger mountain systems in the world with the collision first taking place around 55 million years ago.  The process that formed the mountains is still occurring with the Indian plate moving northward at a rate of about 5 centimetres per year.  It is this forward drift and ongoing collision that creates the seismic activity which is manifested as earthquakes.  

 
The 2400 kilometer-long Himalayas can be divided into several geological or tectonic zones that are each separated by major thrust faults as shown on these diagrams:
 
Approximately one-third of the Himalayan range lies within the boundaries of Nepal.
 
Here is a cross section showing the physiography of the Himalayas:
 
As I noted above, the Himalayan mountains are crossed by a series of faults of the thrust (faults where one side moves vertically with respect to the other) and slip-strike faults (faults where one side moves laterally with respect to the other).  Some regions of the Himalayas are far more heavily faulted than others, particularly the central Himalayas found in Nepal.  In the Western and Central parts of Nepal, there are mainly thrust faults and in Eastern Nepal, there are mainly strike-slip and thrust faults. 
 
Let's close this brief posting with a map showing the seismic regions of Nepal that also shows the numerous earthquakes that have taken place since the early 1800s:
 
Nepal and the Himalayas in general are one of the world's most seismically active areas.  The complex tectonic setting of the region has made it a focus study area for the world's seismologists who are trying to gain a better understanding of the tectonic framework of the region so that, in the future, they may be able to predict the occurrence of significant earthquakes through changes in seismicity patterns.
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