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Environment
Saved by 'Kat-ki-Kunni'
by V.K. Joshi
People get
killed during earthquakes. It is an irony that the earthquake is never
the killer they get killed by the house collapse. It is yet another
irony that the worst earthquakes occur during the night when people are
fast asleep and taken unawares.
For northern India the Twentieth century started on a poignant note. It
was 4th April 1905 when people in the quiet town of Kangra, Punjab (now
in H.P.) were jolted by a massive earthquake. Records of the Punjab
government show that out of a population of 375,000 more than 20,000
people perished in this tragic event. The fury of the earthquake was
such that nearly 100,000 buildings were destroyed within the footprint
of the earthquake and 53,000 domestic animals perished. This area was
famous for its aqueducts in use for agriculture since generations. They
too were obliterated. In terms of money the loss was estimated at Rs.
2.9million (in 1905!).
So
devastating was the earthquake that the famous Fort at Kangra built
around ninth-tenth century AD was finally in control of the Sikh ruler
Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1809). The British gained control of the Fort in
1846. Fortunately the British garrison stationed there had moved out
before the Fort was devastated by the earthquake. So high was the
intensity of the earthquake that the thick walls of the Fort and the
intricately carved walls of Laxmi Narayan Temple built in tenth century
suffered heavy damages.
The earthquake did not spare either the worship places of any religion.
A Church built in 1852 at Dharamshala, a nearby beautiful town was
ruined almost to rubble. It was rebuilt in 1929 and once again badly
mauled by Chamba earthquake in 1945.
The
quake did not spare even the dead. Tell tales of the earthquake are
preserved in the Churchyard. Most tombs made prior to 1905 show the
signs of heavy damage. Those made post earthquake remained unscathed.
The Earthquake had devastated houses in a vast area of H.P. It was
amazing that some houses remained unaffected by the shaking! A study
carried out by a group of structural engineers found that indigenous
techniques used by the ancestors in H.P., Kashmir and Uttaranchal were a
unique kind of earthquake resistant houses.
Called as 'Kat-Ki-Kunni'
in Kulu H.P. 'Pherols' in Uttarkashi in Uttaranchal and 'Dhajji-Dewari'
buildings in Kashmir have one thing in common, that is the use of wooden
beams as shock-absorbers in the thick walls of stone.
'Kat-Ki-Kunni'
has thick vertical wooden beams on the corners with horizontal beams
connected to them at three to five feet interval. Thus a sort of wooden
lattice is made within the rock masonry. It is quite amazing that till
date these houses have not been affected by the earthquakes! The Nagger
Castle near Kulu now a Hotel is one of the classic examples of this type
of architecture. It is worth adding here that the author's ancestral
house at Almora in Uttaranchal still stands majestically since 1740
despite several earthquakes till date. The house is earthquake resistant
with thick, hand chiseled Cedar wood beams as shock breakers in the
masonry.
Wood is precious now and one cannot even dream of using 40 to 50cm thick
and five to six meter long Cedar beams for constructing a 'safe house'.
But yes earthquake resistant houses are possible. Seismology has become
a specialized science now and so are the designs of such houses.
During the past 100 years the science of Seismology has developed in
leaps and bounds. Though a real time forecast is still not feasible, but
it is possible to predict about large magnitude earthquakes. Susan E.
Hough, of the United States Geological Survey, Roger Bilham, Nicole
Feldt seismologists of the Department of Geological Sciences, University
of Colorado, USA and Nicholas Ambraseys of Department of Earthquake
Engineering, Imperial College, London rummaged the data available on
Kangra earthquake of 1905 and with additional data from field, published
a paper in the prestigious science journal, Current Science (India) in
May 2005. Their study has brought to light some unexpected results. The
epicenter region shows a halo of enhanced intensity in 150-200km radius
and as reported by earlier workers the shaking of Dehradun region few
minutes later was due to yet another earthquake triggered after Kangra
earthquake.
Amazingly these seismologists could lay their hands on some precious
instrument records of Kangra earthquake. Those days despite seismology
being in infancy the Colaba Observatory at far flung Bombay recorded the
quake within moments of its occurrence. Laboratories at Gottingham and
Leipzig, recorded the event within six to seven minutes of occurrence.
From the patterns of these records Hough and his team mates conjecture
that possibility of a major earthquake occurring in the frontal belt of
Himalayas close to Delhi can not be ruled out.
A seminar to mark the Centenary of Kangra Earthquake was organized by
Geological Survey Of India (GSI) in April 2005. Roger Bilham and his
colleague Kali Wallace write in the Seminar Volume that Kangra
earthquake was a corollary of an earlier greater earthquake that rocked
western Himalayas in 1400 c . Subsequent earthquakes of 1833 and 1934
were a part of the same chain of events. Such events occur due to
rupture of continental plates. One of the classic examples is the 2004
Sumatra/Nicobar/Andaman earthquake where the earlier ruptured plate was
further stressed and ruptured. Taking the Nepal earthquakes as a
precedent overlapping ruptures in the Himalayan plates, they conclude
that a similar of greater event can not be ruled out in near future.
A.S. Arya of I.I.T. Roorkee has estimated that if an earthquake of the
magnitude and intensity that struck Kangra in 1905, re-strikes the
financial losses would be of the order of Rs 51.04 billion. In other
words nature's ire will render us homeless, jobless destitute unless
serious steps are taken.
One can not stop earthquakes from occurring. One can only strengthen his
own house to save it from a collapse during the calamity. We will read
about such houses and buildings after knowing about some recent quakes
and developments in the seismology.
September 3, 2006
Kangra Fort ruined by the
earthquake.
The quake did not spare even the dead! (Courtesy GSI)
Ancestral House witness to many quakes. (Courtesy Ms S. Joshi,
Melbourne)
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