At 00:58:53 UTC on 26 December 2004, a great earthquake
with preliminary moment magnitude (Mw) = 9.0 occurred at a depth of
30 km offshore of the northeast coast of the island of Sumatra, Indonesia.
This event was the largest earthquake since the Good Friday Earthquake
in Alaska, U.S.A. in 1964. This earthquake also spawned a series of
tsunamis that devastated coastal zones and islands throughout the Indian
Ocean basin, resulting in perhaps the greatest natural disaster to affect
human cultures in recorded history. The following information regarding
this earthquake was taken from the United States Geological Survey " Preliminary
Earthquake Report".
![](NEIC_IndonesiaMap.gif)
Location map of Indonesia from the National Earthquake
Information Center
(http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/bulletin/neic_slav_l.html)
The great earthquake of 26 December 2004 occurred where the Indian
plate is being subducted beneath the Burma microplate. In this region,
the motion of the Indian plate relative to the Burma microplate
is northeastward at an average rate of approximately 0.06 meters
per year (approximately 2.4 inches per year).
![](USGS_TectonicSetting_lg.gif)
Tectonic Setting of Earthquake of 26 December 2004
from United States Geological Survey
(http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqinthenews/2004/usslav/)
Historical Seismicity and Great Earthquake of 26 December
2004:
Persistent seismicity related to ongoing subduction
processes in this region leads to many earthquakes annually, some of
which are of damaging magnitudes (greater than Mw 6.5). A well-defined
Benioff Zone, where earthquake hypocenters become progressively deeper
(from near-surface events to maximum depths of approximately 300 km),
is evident as one moves northeastward from the Sunda Trench (purple
line below) across the island of Sumatra.
As such, the devastating earthquake of 26 December 2004
(star on image below) occurred in an area of well-known historical
seismicity at the boundary of two lithospheric plates.
Tsunami of 26 December 2004:
Preliminary estimates of the rupture zone from this earthquake suggest
an area of significant disturbance 1,200 km long and 100 km wide.
It is hypothesized this area of rupture had an average fault displacement
of at least 15 m resulting in uplift of the seafloor on the overriding
plate of perhaps several meters. It is this uplift that is responsible
for excitation of tsunamis that devastated the shores of the Indian
Ocean basin.
![](Tsunami2004_AffectedAreaCropped.jpg)
Areas Potentially Affected by Tsunami of 26 December
2004 from UNOSAT
(www.unosat.org)
In the image above, shore zones of the Indian ocean at elevations
less than 20 m above sea-level are depicted in yellow. These are maximum
areas that were potentially impacted by tsunamis on 26 December 2004.
Ongoing investigations in potentially affected areas are attempting
to assess actual tsunami impacts.
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