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Copyright Information: All images are in the public domain and available for free. If you use this image, credit NOAA/NGDC, NOAA National Geophysical Data Center. |
Golcuk is west of Yuvacik and east of Yuzbasilar. A mosque with a leaning minaret, in Golcuk. The fault scarp is running in a north-south direction, with almost no lateral displacement, but with 70-80 cm of vertical offset. The dome had jumped from the support columns and had ""flown"" over the pulpit. This fault is possibly a connecting secondary fault between two east-west faults. Note the surface rupture near the gate. Image Credit: NOAA National Geophysical Data Center August 17, 1999 Izmit (Kocaeli) Turkey earthquake On August 17, 1999, at 3:02 am local time (00:02 GMT) a magnitude (Mw) 7.4 earthquake occurred on the northern Anatolian fault. The epicenter was located very close to the south shore of the Bay of Izmit, an eastward extension of the Marmara Sea. The location of this earthquake and its proximity to a populous region on the Bay of Izmit contributed greatly to its damaging effects. The total estimated loss for port facilities in the region was around $200 million (US). Subsidence and slumping caused much of the coastal damage, but a tsunami was generated that also caused coastal damage and deaths. Event Data:
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