GCSE Earthquakes case study -Nepal LIC
Epicentre
80 km to the northwest of the Nepalese capital of Kathmandu
Tourism
A key industry for Nepal, was massively damaged
25th April, 2015
Date of the Nepal Earthquake
$10billion
Estimates of damage by Nepalese government
$2,660 per annum
GNI of Nepal at the time of the quake, a lower middle income country
Amplification
Occurred in Kathmandu as it sits on the Kathmandu Basin, which contains up to 600 m of sedimentary rocks, representing the infilling of a lake.
Dharahara Tower
One of the centuries-old buildings were destroyed at UNESCO World Heritage sites in the Kathmandu Valley
Unreinforced brick masonry
Type of houses in Nepal that are highly vulnerable to earthquake shaking
New education initiatives
across Nepal to do earthquake drills as a response to the quake
Collisional boundary
caused the quake where the Indian plate is converging (colliding) with Eurasia at a rate of 45 mm/yr towards the north-northeast, driving the uplift of the Himalayan mountain range
India and China
committed over $1 billion to help support Nepal.
19,009
injured
14%
of homes needed had been built 3 years after the quake
90 percent
of soldiers from the Nepalese army mobilised to worst hit areas, but efforts were hampered by landslides and damaged infrastructure
8,632
official death toll
7.8 to 7.9
on the Richter scale
The Asian Development Bank (ADB)
provided a USD$3 million grant to Nepal for immediate relief efforts; and up to USD$200 million for the first phase of rehabilitation.
Harvests
reduced or lost
Tent cities
sprung up in Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal
An avalanche
triggered by the quake on Mount Everest, killed 17 people.