Photo gallery for Earth-shaking events in Amboseli
Earth-shaking events in Amboseli

The Amboseli elephant research team felt the earth shaking late afternoon on the 17th of July. Just after 5 PM local time the nearly 6-magnitude tremor started. The team ran out of the office and their quarters for safety. The shock lasted nearly a minute. One of the nearby Ol Tukai Lodge cottages was on fire, and the team spent the next hour helping lodge staff to quell the blaze. No one was hurt.
This is the latest in a series of small earthquakes that has been rocking Kenya and Tanzania over the past few days. It's getting rather close to home: the US Geological Survey Earthquake Hazards Program tells us the epicenter was some 90 km (55 mi) dues west of the Elephant Research Headquarters in the middle of Amboseli National Park.
The image shown here comes from the USGS website at the location given below. We've added the annotations: Red Arrow, the epicenter; (1) AERP Elephant Research Headquarters; (2) Oldonyo Lengai, said to be the last active volcano in East Africa; (3) Lake Natron. The Kenya-Tanzania border is the diagonal grey line.
Here's the official USGS story to date:
"The sequence of earthquakes that has been occurring in northern Tanzania since July 14, 2007, represents a seismic phenomenon known as a seismic "swarm"-- an episode of high earthquake activity in which the largest earthquake does not occur at the beginning of the episode and in which the largest earthquake is not substantially larger than other earthquakes of the episode. Worldwide, earthquake swarm activity is commonly associated with tectonic regions in which both strike-slip fault and normal faulting occur and where magmatic activity occurs at shallow depths in the earth's crust.
"The earthquake swarm is situated close to the Ol Doinyo Lengai volcano, an active volcano in the Gregory Rift of the East African rift system. Although volcanic eruptions are often preceded and accompanied by earthquake swarms, most earthquake swarms are not associated with volcanic eruptions. Information recorded at the U. S. Geological Survey/National Earthquake Information Center is not sufficient to determine if the current Tanzania swarm activity reflects a geologic process that might lead to a change in the eruptive behavior of Ol Doinyo Lengai.
"The East African rift system is a diffuse zone of crustal extension that passes through eastern Africa from Djibouti and Eritrea on the north to Malawi and Mozambique on the south and that constitutes the boundary between the Africa plate on the west and the Somalia plate on the east. At the earthquake's latitude, the Africa and Somalia plates are spreading apart at a rate of several millimeters per year. The largest earthquake to have occurred in the rift system since 1900 had a magnitude of about 7.6. Earthquakes within the East African rift system occur as the result of both normal faulting and strike-slip faulting." (http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqcenter/recenteqsww/Quakes/us2007exbe.php#su...)

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