Tectonic Plates- Week 2
The country of South Korea is located on the Eurasian plates, tectonic plates that cover parts in Europe and Asia. But although being located on Eurasian plates it is actually on a minor plate called "Amuria plate" which is still part of Eurasian plates but covers the far east of Russia and northeast China. Since South Korea does not sit on the major plate of Eurasia it does not experience much seismic activity.
Despite being close to China and Japan where two countries experience a lot of seismic activity it does not affect the Korean peninsula as its neighboring countries. Because of significant tectonic movement throughout millions of years ago, South Korea is now located on a stable platform.
In 2011, Japan experienced their biggest earthquake, Tohoku, which was so strong that it was able to affect Korea and brought consequences for the country. Kim So- Gu, who is head of the Korea seismological Institute states that the Tohoku earthquake was able to shift Korea's peninsula position eastward by 2 centimeters including 2 of Korea's smaller islands such as Ulleungdo and Dokdo were able to shift by four to five centimeters.
file:///C:/Users/pache/Downloads/29009933.pdf
https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/ssa/bssa/article/96/3/846/146731/Historical-Seismicity-of-Korea
https://eurasiatectonics.weebly.com/amurian-plate.html
Interesting research!- Looking forward to your earthquakes findings!
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