*An earthquake changed the course of the Ganges: Could it happen again? *

A major earthquake 2,500 years ago caused one of the largest rivers on
Earth to abruptly change course, according to a new study. The previously
undocumented quake rerouted the main channel of the Ganges River in what is
now densely populated Bangladesh, which remains vulnerable to big quakes.
The study was published in the journal *Nature Communications*.

Scientists have documented many river-course changes, called avulsions,
including some in response to earthquakes. However, "I don't think we have
ever seen such a big one anywhere," said study co-author Michael Steckler,
a geophysicist at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, which is part of the
Columbia Climate School. It could have easily inundated anyone and anything
in the wrong place at the wrong time, he said.

Lead author Liz Chamberlain, an assistant professor at the Netherlands'
Wageningen University, said, "It was not previously confirmed that
earthquakes could drive avulsion in deltas, especially for an immense river
like the Ganges."

The Ganges rises in the Himalayas and flows for some 1,600 miles,
eventually combining with other major rivers including the Brahmaputra and
the Meghna to form a labyrinth of waterways that empty into a wide stretch
of the Bay of Bengal spanning Bangladesh and India. Together, they form the
world's second-largest river system as measured by discharge. (The Amazon
is first.)

Like other rivers that run through major deltas, the Ganges periodically
undergoes minor or major course changes without any help from earthquakes.
Sediments washed from upstream settle and build up in the channel, until
eventually the river bed grows subtly higher than the surrounding flood
plain.

At some point, the water breaks through and begins constructing a new path
for itself. But this does not generally happen all at once—it may take
successive floods over years or decades. An earthquake-related avulsion, on
the other hand, can occur more or less instantaneously, said Steckler.

In satellite imagery, the authors of the new study spotted what they say
was probably the former main channel of the river, some 100 kilometers
south of the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka. This is a low-lying area about
1.5 kilometers wide that can be found intermittently for some 100
kilometers more or less parallel to the current river course. Filled with
mud, it frequently floods, and is used mainly for rice cultivation.

Chamberlain and other researchers were exploring this area in 2018 when
they came across a freshly dug excavation for a pond that had not yet been
filled with water.

On one flank, they spotted distinct vertical dikes of light-colored sand
cutting up through horizontal layers of mud. This is a well-known feature
created by earthquakes: In such watery areas, sustained shaking can
pressurize buried layers of sand and inject them upward through overlying
mud. The result: literal sand volcanoes, which can erupt at the surface.
Called seismites, here, they were 30 or 40 centimeters wide, cutting up
through 3 or 4 meters of mud.

Further investigation showed the seismites were oriented in a systematic
pattern, suggesting they were all created at the same time. Chemical
analyses of sand grains and particles of mud showed that the eruptions and
the abandonment and infilling of the channel both took place about 2,500
years ago.

Furthermore, there was a similar site some 85 kilometers downstream in the
old channel that had filled in with mud at the same time. The authors'
conclusion: This was a big, sudden avulsion triggered by an earthquake,
estimated to be magnitude 7 or 8.

A classic sign of a landscape disrupted by an earthquake: a vein of sand
that has been pushed up through darker-colored sediments. Credit: Liz
Chamberlain
The quake could have had one of two possible sources, they say. One is a
subduction zone to the south and east, where a huge plate of oceanic crust
is shoving itself under Bangladesh, Myanmar and northeastern India. Or it
could have come from giant splay faults at the foot of the Himalayas to the
north, which are slowly rising because the Indian subcontinent is slowly
colliding with the rest of Asia.

A 2016 study led by Steckler shows that these zones are now building
stress, and could produce earthquakes comparable to the one 2,500 years
ago. The last one of this size occurred in 1762, producing a deadly tsunami
that traveled up the river to Dhaka. Another may have occurred around 1140
CE.

The 2016 study estimates that a modern recurrence of such a quake could
affect 140 million people. "Large earthquakes impact large areas and can
have long-lasting economic, social and political effects," said Syed
Humayun Akhter, vice-chancellor of Bangladesh Open University and a
co-author on both studies.

The Ganges is not the only river facing such hazards. Others cradled in
tectonically-active deltas include China's Yellow River; Myanmar's
Irrawaddy; the Klamath, San Joaquin and Santa Clara rivers, which flow off
the U.S. West Coast; and the Jordan, spanning the borders of Syria, Jordan,
the Palestinian West Bank and Israel.

Other co-authors of the new study are at the University of Cologne,
Germany; the University of Dhaka; Bangladesh University of Professionals;
Noakhali Science and Technology University, Bangladesh; and the University
of Salzburg, Austria.

More information: Cascading hazards of a major Bengal basin earthquake and
abrupt avulsion of the Ganges River, Nature Communications (2024). DOI:
10.1038/s41467-024-47786-4

Journal information: *Nature Communications *

https://t.co/I2KsqBFuAA

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