Phivolcs Director Renato Solidum told reporters on Wednesday that a 100-meter portion of the Philippine Fault system stretching from Albuera to Mahaplag towns in Leyte is ripe enough for a strong earthquake.
“If the fault line in the central part of Leyte would move at
magnitude 7.2, consequently, an Intensity 8 earthquake may affect many
populated areas of Leyte,” Solidum said.
The recent shaking of a connected fault line segment, such as the
July 6, 2017 earthquake that struck Kananga, Leyte and Ormoc City, may trigger
movements of the Philippine Fault, the Phivolcs official said.
“There are movements but very weak since 1900 until the present.
We don’t know when the major earthquake will happen, but people have to be
aware,” Solidum told reporters.
The Phivolcs chief asked local government units (LGUs) to relocate
houses within fault lines to prevent loss of lives and serious damage to
properties.
Leyte Governor Leopoldo Dominico Petilla said LGUs, especially
those near the fault line, have been preparing for the possible earthquake.
“Apart from implementing the updated National Building Code, we
will also come up with a local building code to ensure that concrete buildings
are safe from earthquakes,” Petilla added.
The Leyte Island fault line is part of the 1,200-km.-long
Philippine fault zone, a major tectonic feature that transects the whole
Philippine archipelago from northwestern Luzon to southeastern Mindanao.
This arc-parallel and left-lateral strike slip fault is divided
into several segments and has been the source of large-magnitude earthquakes in
recent years, such as the 1973 Ragay Gulf earthquake (magnitude 7), 1990 Luzon
earthquake (magnitude 7.7), and 2003 Masbate earthquake (magnitude 6.2).
The high seismic risk posed by this fault zone requires a
large-scale active faults map, a fundamental data set for seismic hazard
mitigation.
“The record of Palo seismic station is very important for the
monitoring of movements of the Philippine Fault and Philippine Trench. Our
present location is very ideal for seismic station since we are on top of
bedrock,” Solidum said.
The seismic station was established in Arado village back in the
1970s by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services
Administration when geotectonic phenomena monitoring was still under the
weather bureau’s watch. (SQM/PNA)
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