Devastating earthquakes have rocked the Middle east region, hitting Turkey the hardest, as well as parts of Syria.
At least 1,600 people are dead, but that number is expected to climb much higher.
A huge earthquake killed about 1,700 people and injured thousands more on Monday in central Turkey and northwest Syria, flattening apartment blocks and heaping more destruction on Syrian cities already devastated by years of war.
The magnitude 7.8 quake, which hit before sunrise in bitter winter weather, was the worst to strike Turkey this century. It was followed in the early afternoon by another large quake of magnitude 7.7.
It was not immediately clear how much damage had been done by the second quake, which like the first was felt across the region and endangered rescuers struggling to pull casualties from the rubble, often using their bare hands to remove masonry.
“We were shaken like a cradle. There were nine of us at home. Two sons of mine are still in the rubble, I’m waiting for them,” said a woman with a broken arm and injuries to her face, speaking in an ambulance near the wreckage of a seven-storey block where she had lived in Diyarbakir in southeast Turkey.
The devastation is staggering:
ALERT ? The most powerful earthquake in nearly a century struck Turkey and Syria early Monday, killing over 1,400 people in their sleep, levelling buildings and causing tremors felt as far away as Greenland https://t.co/kbd3KWLc5I pic.twitter.com/ZRRjLbfKG9
— Insider Paper (@TheInsiderPaper) February 6, 2023
The number of dead is heartbreaking.
In addition, buildings are still crumbling, making the scene even more dangerous:
Nightmare scenes in Turkey…pic.twitter.com/Fty9N0BtRX
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
Big building down in Aleppopic.twitter.com/Veu9aUYMgD
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
There is nowhere to hide.
Terrifying footage of buildings collapsing around panicked people in the streets.
Now reports of a third, 6.0 MAG earthquake striking Göksun, Turkey in the last hour.pic.twitter.com/TG6fZT6Da9
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
People are panicked, running for their lives, as buildings crumble around them:
Panic and chaos in the streets of Turkeypic.twitter.com/AFAoPQcF0s
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
A 2,200 year old castle is now gone:
2,200 years old Gazintap Castle destroyed by the earthquake in Turkey.
Before vs Now. pic.twitter.com/vAtIWhmlsA
— Xavi Ruiz (@xruiztru) February 6, 2023
It looks like as if a nuclear blast hit the city:
It looks like the city was bombedpic.twitter.com/1BMpLH2NFL
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
Hatay Province, Turkey — "All the buildings have collapsed."pic.twitter.com/z0W39W2zHq
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
7.8 pic.twitter.com/Qu8BuUnpe9
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
And in tragic news, among so many missing, fears are rising that soccer star Christian Atsu is also buried beneath the rubble.
Fears growing for soccer player Christian Atsu following the latest set of earthquakes in Turkey.
There are reports that he is stuck under rubble.pic.twitter.com/r85md31X29
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
In a bit of good new, a little girl was pulled alive from the rubble:
A young girl rescued from the rubblepic.twitter.com/3kXlX43Dh5
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
Seismologist Tyler Metcalf explains what’s likely to happen now:
The big #earthquakes in #Turkey have likely led to destabilization of fault lines across the world. There could be many earthquakes in many areas across the world over the next few to several days. One, a Magnitude ~4.2 just hit Buffalo, NY.
He based his tweet off a study published by Science News:
The findings, published Aug. 2 in Nature Scientific Reports, are an important step toward improved short-term earthquake forecasting and risk assessment.
Scientists at Oregon State University looked at 44 years of seismic data and found clear evidence that temblors of magnitude 6.5 or larger trigger other quakes of magnitude 5.0 or larger.
It had been thought that aftershocks — smaller magnitude quakes that occur in the same region as the initial quake as the surrounding crust adjusts after the fault perturbation — and smaller earthquakes at great distances — were the main global effects of very large earthquakes.But the OSU analysis of seismic data from 1973 through 2016 — an analysis that excluded data from aftershock zones — using larger time windows than in previous studies, provided discernible evidence that in the three days following one large quake, other earthquakes were more likely to occur.
Each test case in the study represented a single three-day window “injected” with a large-magnitude (6.5 or greater) earthquake suspected of inducing other quakes, and accompanying each case was a control group of 5,355 three-day periods that didn’t have the quake injection.“The test cases showed a clearly detectable increase over background rates,” said the study’s corresponding author, Robert O’Malley, a researcher in the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences. “Earthquakes are part of a cycle of tectonic stress buildup and release. As fault zones near the end of this seismic cycle, tipping points may be reached and triggering can occur.”
The higher the magnitude, the more likely a quake is to trigger another quake. Higher-magnitude quakes, which have been happening with more frequency in recent years, also seem to be triggered more often than lower-magnitude ones.A tremblor is most likely to induce another quake within 30 degrees of the original quake’s antipode — the point directly opposite it on the other side of the globe.
This could explain the shockwaves that were felt in Japan:
Earthquake shockwaves recorded 5,000 miles away in Japan…pic.twitter.com/74gmfjGLc5
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) February 6, 2023
Not to mention, the Buffalo earthquake this morning:
ALERT – 3.8 magnitude earthquake strikes Buffalo area, New York
— Insider Paper (@TheInsiderPaper) February 6, 2023
Also, just 3 weeks ago an earthquake researcher said the lack of big earthquakes lately was likely due to a blockage/buildup of pressure that could erupt in a series of “megaquakes.”
It's obvious they're hiding something big concerning the plates when these 4 signs are happening right under our noses and yet not a word said about the big changes. So it's evidently being censored and for a big reason. Plus southern Japan to middle Philippines slowed WAY down. pic.twitter.com/i15QPLDipS
— ??Canadian??earthquake??researcher?? (@mxdondevivo) January 17, 2023
President Erdogan said 5,383 had been injured but he could not predict how much the death toll would rise as search and rescue efforts continued. He added that 2,818 buildings had collapsed.
Our thoughts and prayers are with all the people who have been impacted by this devastating earthquake.
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