Bhuj earthquake of 2001
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur - Effects of Local Geology on damage severity during Bhuj, India Earthquake
- World Institute of Disaster Risk Management Library - The Bhuj Earthquake
- CORE - 2001 Bhuj-Kachchh earthquake: surface faulting and its relation with neotectonics and regional structures, Gujarat, Western India
- NASA - Earth Observatory - Liquefaction Effects from the Bhuj Earthquake
- Asian Disaster Reduction Center - The Gujarat Earthquake 2001
- Indian Academy of Sciences - An eyewitness account of the Bhuj earthquake
- Academia - The 2001 Kutch (Bhuj) earthquake: Coseismic surface features and their significance
- Date:
- January 22, 2001
Bhuj earthquake of 2001, massive earthquake that occurred on Jan. 26, 2001, in the Indian state of Gujarat, on the Pakistani border.
The earthquake struck near the town of Bhuj on the morning of India’s annual Republic Day (celebrating the creation of the Republic of India in 1950), and it was felt throughout much of northwestern India and parts of Pakistan. The moment magnitude of the quake was 7.7 (6.9 on the Richter scale). In addition to killing more than 20,000 people and injuring more than 150,000 others, the quake left hundreds of thousands homeless and destroyed or damaged more than a million buildings. A large majority of the local crops were ruined as well. Many people were still living in makeshift shelters a year later.