Thursday, September 26, 2013
Pakistan earthquake creates new island
    
    
      The new mound of      earth appears to be 20 to 40 feet high and 100 feet wide and rose out of      the sea at a spot about 350 feet from the coast.    
            Scientists are        not yet in consensus, but many believe Pakistan's newest piece        of land may be a mud volcano caused by a recent earthquake,        according to LiveScience.      
              The other        possibility is that it was formed from a landslide, Geologist Bob Yeats        toldLiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.      
              A 7.7-magnitude        earthquake shook western Pakistan early Tuesday and made mud houses        crumble. According to Reuters, more than 320 people were killed. The        death toll is expected to rise as emergency workers progress deeper into        the mountains to assess the damage in the remote Baluchistan province.      
              Meanwhile, on        the coast, residents of Gwadar saw a solitary island rise from the sea.       
              According to NBC        News, "older residents of the coastal town said the land emergence was        déjà vu — an earthquake in 1968 produced an island that stayed for one        year and then vanished.      
              Seismologists        suspect the island is a temporary formation resulting from "a jet of        mud, sand and water that gushed to the surface as the temblor churned        and pressurized that slurry under the ocean floor," NBC News said.      
              The world's most        notorious mud volcano, Indonesia's Lusi, destroyed a town in 2006.        Science magazine noted that scientists have yet to agree on what caused        that deadly mud island.      
    Article Source here
Author:
MSN News


 
 
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