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Aftershocks from earthquake near Melbourne could be felt for months

Aftershocks from one of the biggest earthquakes to hit Australia in recent years could continue to rock residents for months, one expert says.

Melbourne rocked by sudden earthquake

The biggest earthquake in more than 50 years to impact a significant population centre in Australia has rocked residents in Melbourne and several other cities, with aftershocks potentially being felt for months.

The 5.9 magnitude earthquake whose epicentre was located in Mansfield – a small town about 180km northeast of Melbourne – was felt in the Victorian capital and by some residents in cities as far away as Sydney and Canberra, as well as in Tasmania.

It was larger in magnitude to an earthquake which devastated the city of Newcastle, north of Sydney, in 1989, which was a magnitude 5.6.

Professor Chris Elders of Curtin University’s School of Earth and Planetary Sciences said it has been more than 50 years since such a large earthquake had hit a significant population centre – when one hit Meckering, Western Australia, 130km east of Perth, in October 1968. The 6.5 magnitude quake caused around $2 million worth of damage and injured about 20 people.

“It is unusual to have an earthquake of this size. It’s certainly the largest one that’s affected Australia in recent times,” Prof Elders told news.com.au.

“It’s at the upper end of what we experience in Australia.”

A damaged building on Chapel Street in Prahran, inner Melbourne, after the earthquake hit the city this morning. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Andrew Henshaw
A damaged building on Chapel Street in Prahran, inner Melbourne, after the earthquake hit the city this morning. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Andrew Henshaw

While there have been other quakes in Australia of a similar size, they have generally occurred in more remote areas.

The most recent quake that Australians would remember is the one which hit Newcastle on December 28, 1989, more than 30 years ago. This killed 13 people and damaged 50,000 buildings, with a damage bill adding up to around $4 billion. More than 300,000 people were affected by that quake, and 1000 were left homeless.

In 2019, there was 6.6 magnitude quake which occurred offshore near Western Australia’s Kimberley Coast and was felt in Darwin and Perth.

Following Wednesday’s quake, which hit around 9am, there has already been several more tremors.

Map showing the epicentre of the earthquake and the intensity of the tremors in surrounding areas. Source: USGS
Map showing the epicentre of the earthquake and the intensity of the tremors in surrounding areas. Source: USGS

Prof Elders said there were likely to be more aftershocks and tremors after such a large earthquake.

“Certainly in the days ahead we are likely to experience some and they can last several weeks or maybe even months but generally they would be much smaller and not as noticeable, although sometimes you can get a significant aftershock,” he said.

He said a 5.9 magnitude quake is large enough to cause significant structural damage to buildings, depending on how close they are to the epicentre and what type of bedrock they were built on.

“Fortunately it appears in this case it has caused superficial but not structural damage,” he said.

The quake was appeared to cause significant damage to at least one building in Melbourne. William West/AFP
The quake was appeared to cause significant damage to at least one building in Melbourne. William West/AFP

Prof Elders said there were several hundred earthquakes every year in Australia but they were generally much smaller and located in more remote areas so people didn’t feel or hear about them.

These were generally magnitude 2 or 3 quakes that would feel similar to a “big lorry driving past your house and making things rattle a bit”.

“They are often not very close to major centres and are pretty evenly distributed throughout the continent,” he said.

Prof Elders said Australia was surrounded by tectonic plate boundaries.

“There are forces being generated all around Australia and so it’s not surprising that stresses build up within the continent and cause an old fault line to fail and move,” he said.

“The quake would be the result of that.”

Red lines show boundaries of tectonic plates that surround Australia, with the blue dot showing the location of Wednesday’s quake. Source: USGS
Red lines show boundaries of tectonic plates that surround Australia, with the blue dot showing the location of Wednesday’s quake. Source: USGS

He said it was very difficult to predict when earthquakes will occur and there was no warning of Wednesday’s quake in Victoria.

It’s also not unusual for a large quake to be felt over a very wide area, with Prof Elders saying the depth of the quake influenced this.

“The larger it is and the shallower it is, the more widely it will be felt,” he said.

“At the moment it’s been suggested the quake occurred 10km deep but that’s probably just a preliminary estimate.

“We won’t really know for a little while what depth it occurred at.”

Canberra resident Carie, who lives in one of three towers at the Axis apartments, said she was in the middle of an online meeting when she noticed the building moving about 9.20am.

“I just froze because everything just physically started to move,” she told news.com.au.

“It felt like the walls were moving. It was really scary.”

The 54-year-old said her client urged her to “just get out” when Carie told her what was happening.

Her first thought was there could be a structural issue with her building, like what had happened at Sydney’s Opal towers.

“It didn’t dawn on me that it could be an earthquake because we’re in Canberra,” she said.

She headed on to her balcony and saw many other residents at the 350-unit complex doing the same. “It was evident that all three buildings felt it very strongly,” she said.

She quickly went downstairs where others had also gathered.

“No alarms went off, common sense just told you, you just need to get out of the building,” she said.

Carie, who lives on the eighth floor, said some of those on lower levels said they didn’t feel the quake but others on her level did.

For those who are concerned about what to do during a quake, Prof Elders said the best advice is for people to get under a table if there is one close by, or if the exit is clear, to leave a building and to move away from it, into open space to avoid anything that might be falling.

charis.chang@news.com.au | @charischang2

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/technology/environment/aftershocks-from-earthquake-near-melbourne-could-be-felt-for-months/news-story/735b59059ecfa2fb5b4674551c478786