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Santo Domingo.- Active geologic faults cross Hispaniola, shared by Dominican Republic and Haiti, give the two nations high probabilities of seismic activity, such as quakes and tsunamis.

Recorded from 2003 to September 2011 were 3,586 telluric movements, of which 1,979 had magnitudes between 2.4 and 5.4.

One of the active important blocks for seismic activity is the country’s north, with the 300 kilometer long Northern Fault, which goes from Manzanillo, Montecristi (Northwest) to Samaná (Northeast).

Also in the north are the Northern Fault and the Puerto Rico Trench. Both groups border part of the Atlantic Ocean.

Among the most important seismic events, in magnitude as well as in damages caused occurred in that block, but felt in the entire country, was on December 2, 1562, which destroyed Santiago and La Vega.

On May 7, 1842, a magnitude 11 quake was catastrophic for the entire island, bringing about the destruction of Santiago, Montecristi, Mao, La Vega and Cotuí, while the tidal wave unleashed along the north coast killed thousands in Haiti.

In the island’s western edge there were severe damages in Cape Haitien, Port-de-Paix, Fort Liberté and Mole Sant-Nicholas. There were also damages in Santo Domingo.

The most recent catastrophe was the January 12, 2010 quake magnitude 7.0, which leveled the Haiti capital Port-au-Prince, where as many as 300,000 people died.

SOURCE: hoy.com.do

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COMMENTS
16 comment(s)
Written by: BASTA, 13 Jan 2012 6:48 AM
From: Dominican Republic, =Ghetto/Legalize Drugs
Bye,bye Metro.
Written by: RoyStone, 13 Jan 2012 6:57 AM
From: Australia
Duh!
Everyone knows this - that's why we are so well prepared for when the next big one hits.
(Rosaries now available on special at your local Catholic church).
Written by: RoyStone, 13 Jan 2012 7:08 AM
From: Australia
According to the US Agency for International Development (USAID) the death toll of the recent Haitian earthquake was between 46,000 and 85,000. According to the Haiti's government it was about 316,000.
A huge tragedy regardless.
When the next big one hits the Dominican Republic, I anticipate the Dominican Government will grossly understate the figures, rather than overstate them . Yes?

During one of Leo's visits to the Dominican Republic he threw a party, sorry, called a meeting, with seismologists. Has anyone see any report or action-plan from it?
Written by: RoyStone, 13 Jan 2012 7:12 AM
From: Australia
BASTA,
Maybe the Metro will be the safest place to be when it hits? If not, it will save on burial expenses.
Written by: RobertoJose, 13 Jan 2012 7:29 AM
From: United States, FREEPORT, Long Island.... (Look, beyond the words)
I can see a good use for the metro and all the underground construction after all, leo is a genius. If you cement all entrance you create bunkers for the wealthy on 12-12-12 and make good monies......

Brilliant!!!!
Written by: Juango, 13 Jan 2012 8:01 AM
From: United States, far S. Florida (formerly Santo Domingo)
Perhaps we could look at such an event as God's way of giving the the Island of Hispanola an enema.
Written by: watcher48, 13 Jan 2012 8:04 AM
From: United States, Omnipresence
@Roy- That report was deemed classified by Leo so as not to alarm those who could use the info against him. The USGS was VERY thorough in their report I hear....
Written by: abc200, 13 Jan 2012 8:13 AM
From: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic
Engineers say towers could be risk-prone
The president of the Dominican College of Engineers, Architects and Surveyors (CODIA), Domingo Tavera Ulloa says buildings built under older seismic standards code may need to be retrofitted. He singled out buildings with tuck-under parking, or open commercial or parking space on the first floor supported by columns. Experts now say that this makes the first story soft and risk-prone in the case of a 7+ earthquake. Tavera Ulloa says that it is possible to upgrade many of the older structures. He also mentioned asymmetric buildings would be vulnerable to major (7+) earthquakes, mentioning places like Chile, Turkey and Mexico as examples of the results of these "construction pathologies." He said the nation's new Seismic Code in effect since March 2011 establishes more earthquake resistant standards especially for high-rise towers.


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S.
Written by: watcher48, 13 Jan 2012 8:19 AM
From: United States, Omnipresence
..Obviously the seismologists/engineeer reports cut & dry. And WHO (pray tell) will be the "transparently ethical "lead agency to enforce these "codes?"
Written by: easyrider, 13 Jan 2012 1:54 PM
From: Dominican Republic, La Romana
The only hope of having real building codes inforced is for a private offshore company from a developed disaplined country do the task otherwise forget it. Corruption is the #2 religon here next to catholasism. Or maybe I have it reversed.

In addition to building code inforcement, a ZONING CODE should also be inforced. How would you like your next door neigbor to turn his house into a cement block factory or a church with blasting noise and music day and night? That's a daily event here.
Written by: Ricardolito, 13 Jan 2012 3:44 PM
From: Dominican Republic, vieja Santo Domingo
We may be prone to quakes and tidal waves but actually we have been very lucky for the last 400 years or so in that we have had very few in the DR that have been real killers or totally destructive..,,I am not suggesting to reduce any safe guards but these periodic articles all say the same thing with little historical evidence....Haiti is another story
Written by: RoyStone, 13 Jan 2012 4:08 PM
From: Australia
watcher48,
Any chance of finding a link to the report?
Written by: HateitorLOVEIT, 14 Jan 2012 3:36 PM
From: United States, Washington, DC
if the big one comes, then the codes will be worthless..... Hispanola is on a plate that runs through Haita, Santiago and runs up to Puerto Plata........ If Hispanola gets hit by a 7..... say goodbye to Hispanola.... at least a lot of it....
Written by: RoyStone, 14 Jan 2012 3:42 PM
From: Australia
HateitorLOVEIT,
Don't worry, we've got Jesus.
.. oh hang on,
so did Haiti.
Written by: zooma, 15 Jan 2012 5:48 AM
From: United States

The truth is the country can enact as many laws or regs it wants in order to make structures quake resistant. However, there are so many existing buildings prone to damage the costs to retrofit them would be so prohibiting that owners would not conform to any new regulation and the event of a big quake would still create catastrophic loss.

The focus should be to create a public safety infrastructure to respond to a quake and enforceable building codes for any new construction to include when existing structures are improved they must be retrofitted to be quake resistant. Building permits would include a fee to support the organization of the public safety infrastructure.

Dream on !!!!!!
Written by: RoyStone, 15 Jan 2012 6:04 AM
From: Australia
zooma,
The probability of any particular Dominican citizen suffering substantial losses from a major earthquake is far higher than winning a fortune in the lottery. Yet we invest much more at the Banca than on earthquake preparedness.
Why?
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