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Papazachos: These are the three faults in Greece that could cause a 7.7 magnitude earthquake like Myanmar’s

According to Professor of Geophysics at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Kostas Papazachos, there are three faults in Greece that could generate an earthquake of magnitude 7.7, similar to the one that struck Myanmar

Newsroom March 30 09:52

He explained, speaking to Star TV, that “an earthquake like the one in Myanmar can’t happen everywhere. For a quake of such magnitude to occur, it needs to be in a zone capable of hosting it, with a fault line spanning hundreds of kilometers.”

Asked if such zones exist in Greece, Papazachos identified three:

  • Primarily the external Greek arc, which starts from Cephalonia, continues south of the Peloponnese, and runs along the southern coast of Crete.
  • The North Aegean trench, which, towards Istanbul and the Anatolian fault, has significant lengths.
  • Finally, there is a marginal zone passing through Amorgos.

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“However, we have no experience with such earthquakes,” continued Papazachos. “In the 7.5-magnitude earthquake in 1956 in Amorgos, we didn’t have the same level of destruction as in Myanmar. The sea, the distance from the coast, and the absence of high-rise buildings, which are more sensitive, protected us.”

The geophysics professor further added, “Earthquakes like the one in Myanmar cause slow oscillations that affect tall buildings. When a quake of magnitude 8.2 struck southern Greece in 365 AD, there were no apartment buildings or high structures.”

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