The transform boundary between the Caribbean and the North American plates.
Please see the related question for more detailed information.
The Haitian earthquake that occurred in January 2010 was caused by a transform boundary where two tectonic plates were sliding past each other. For more information please see the related question.
The Haitian earthquake occurred on January 12, 2010, and lasted for just a few seconds. However, its impact caused widespread devastation, with over 200,000 people losing their lives and millions more displaced.
The Richter or local magnitude scale of the Haitian earthquake has been reported as 7.2. However the Richter Magnitude Scale is no longer the formal scale used for reporting earthquake magnitude having been replaced by the Moment Magnitude Scale.As such, the official strength of the January 12, 2010, quake on the Moment Magnitude Scale was 7.0, as reported by the U.S. Geological Survey, National Earthquake Information Center.Please see the related questions for further information about the Haitian earthquake and it's magnitude and severity.
The earthquake in Haiti was caused by a strike-slip fault along the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault zone, which is a transform boundary. This type of boundary is where two tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally, causing stress to build up and be released in the form of an earthquake.
The devastating earthquake in Haiti occurred on January 12, 2010. It caused widespread destruction and loss of life. The earthquake's impact was immediate and long-lasting, requiring ongoing humanitarian aid and recovery efforts.
No. The Haitian earthquake was caused by a transform boundary.
The Haitian earthquake was caused by the faultline the country sits on.
The Haitian earthquake that occurred in January 2010 was caused by a transform boundary where two tectonic plates were sliding past each other. For more information please see the related question.
Tha Haitian Earthquake was caused by the transform boundary between the Caribbean and the North American plates. Please see the related question for mor information about the Haitian Earthquake.
The Haitian earthquake occurred on January 12, 2010, and lasted for just a few seconds. However, its impact caused widespread devastation, with over 200,000 people losing their lives and millions more displaced.
The Haitian earthquake in 2010 was caused by a slip along a previously unknown fault called the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault zone. It is a strike-slip fault that runs along the boundary between the Caribbean and North American tectonic plates.
transform boundary
The Richter or local magnitude scale of the Haitian earthquake has been reported as 7.2. However the Richter Magnitude Scale is no longer the formal scale used for reporting earthquake magnitude having been replaced by the Moment Magnitude Scale.As such, the official strength of the January 12, 2010, quake on the Moment Magnitude Scale was 7.0, as reported by the U.S. Geological Survey, National Earthquake Information Center.Please see the related questions for further information about the Haitian earthquake and it's magnitude and severity.
The earthquake in Haiti was caused by a strike-slip fault along the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault zone, which is a transform boundary. This type of boundary is where two tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally, causing stress to build up and be released in the form of an earthquake.
The devastating earthquake in Haiti occurred on January 12, 2010. It caused widespread destruction and loss of life. The earthquake's impact was immediate and long-lasting, requiring ongoing humanitarian aid and recovery efforts.
The two earthquakes occurred due to differing types of fault movement (thrust faulting in the Chilean quake vs strike slip faulting in the Haitian quake) and at two differing types of plate boundaries. In the case of the Chilean earthquake, this was at a convergent boundary where the Nazca oceanic plate is being subducted under the continental South American plate as opposed to the Haitian earthquake which occurred at a transform boundary between the Caribbean and North American plates which are both moving east but at differing speeds. The Haitian earthquake was also of lower magnitude (magnitude 7.0) than the Chilean earthquake (magnitude 8.8) however it caused more damage and led to a much larger number of injuries and fatalities due to the poor construction techniques used in Haiti. Please see the related questions for more information.
On a global tectonic scale, movement of the Caribbean and the North American plates were responsible for the Haitian earthquake. However on a subregional tectonic scale, there is a smaller plate that separates the Caribbean and the North American plates known as the Gonave micro-plate on which Haiti is partly situated (on the eastern end). The Gonave micro-plate is bounded to the north by the Oriente and Septentrional Fracture Zones and to the south by the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault, movement on which caused the magnitude 7 Haitian earthquake on the 12th of January 2010. Please see the related questions and links.