Tuesday, June 25, 2024
Year : 2, Issue: 25
2,500 years ago, an earthquake changed the course of one of Earth’s largest rivers, totally altering the landscape. Could it happen again?
by Fred Schwaller
A study has found a major earthquake 2,500 years ago caused one of the largest rivers on Earth to suddenly change course.
The high-magnitude earthquake completely rerouted the main channel of the Ganges River in what is now densely populated Bangladesh, and completely changed the surrounding landscape.
While it is “normal for river channels to move with time, this was an absolutely extreme event. The river moved to an entirely new area,” said lead author Elizabeth Chamberlain of Wageningen University in the Netherlands. The study, published in the journal Nature Communications, is the first evidence of a large river delta being completely relocated by an earthquake.
The study authors warn that Bangladesh is vulnerable to big quakes and that it is possible for the Ganges River to relocate again if another high-magnitude earthquake hit the region.
How an earthquake rerouted the Ganges River
The Ganges begins as streams in the Himalayas and flows for 2,500 kilometers (1,600 miles), eventually combining with other major rivers, including the Brahmaputra and the Meghna. It’s a huge delta river system that empties into a wide stretch of the Bay of Bengal, spanning Bangladesh and India. As with other rivers, the Ganges periodically changes course due to the natural erosion of its riverbanks.
This process takes decades to occur, but “the Ganges-Brahmaputra river system has moved several times over the past 6,000 years,” said Christoph von Hagke of the University of Salzburg, Austria, who also took part in the study.
Chemical analysis of the sand and mud showed several eruptions happened at the same time, about 2,500 years ago. The eruptions were estimated to be magnitude 7 to 8 — about the same as the earthquake which hit Turkey and Syria in 2023.
“This proximity brings frequent major earthquakes,” said Till Hanebuth, a specialist in geosciences at Coastal Carolina University in the US. Hanebuth was not part of the study. Bangladesh is particularly susceptible to catastrophic earthquake events due to its proximity to seismic zones. While the region is not currently thought to be at risk, the researchers said it was possible for an earthquake to be strong enough to reroute the Ganges in the next few hundred to 1,000 years.
Ganges rerouting would be ‘catastrophic for the region’
The researchers said their study showed it was entirely possible for delta rivers to be dramatically rerouted if they are hit by high-magnitude earthquakes.
River breaching and relocation does not only depend on earthquakes — they can also be caused by extreme weather, said Hanebuth.
“Abrupt river avulsions could be caused by a major monsoon or cyclone flooding event, or the collapse of a major river dam,” Hanebuth said, adding that while such could be caused by natural events, they were also “largely human-made.”
Can earthquakes be predicted?
Von Hagke said researchers needed to know more about the likelihood of large-scale river avulsion events in the future, particularly those from earthquakes.
The Ganges isn’t the only river facing earthquake-related hazards. Others include China’s Yellow River, Myanmar’s Irrawaddy, the Klamath, San Joaquin and Santa Clara rivers on the US West Coast, and the Jordan River, which spans the borders of Syria, Jordan, the Palestinian West Bank and Israel.
Source: DW