Dataset Identification:

Resource Abstract:
On May 22, 1960 (19:11 UTC), a Mw 9.5 earthquake occurred in southern Chile (39.5 S, 74.5 W). This was the largest earthquake ever instrumentally recorded. (It was not the largest in terms of dollar damage or number of deaths produced). A damaging foreshock (Mw7.3) had occurred the day before at about 10:02 UTC. The series of earthquakes that followed ravaged southern Chile and ruptured a 1,000 km section of the fault between 37 and 48 degrees South latitude. This rupture was one of the longest ever reported. The earthquake epicenters delineated the SSW-NNE fault that is on shore in the north and submarine in the south. The number of fatalities associated with both the tsunami and the earthquake has been estimated at 5,700. Reportedly there were 3,000 injured; initially there were 717 missing in Chile. Earthquake Damage Accounts The Chilean government reported that 58,622 houses were completely destroyed. Damage (including tsunami damage) was more than $500 million U.S. Dollars. The heaviest damage occurred at Puerto Montt, Valdivia, Rio Negro, Lebu, Concepcion, Maldivia, Alerce, Valdivia, Rinihue, Totoral, and Villarica. Although Chile frequently experiences earthquakes, the buildings were not built to withstand a strong earthquake. Fortunately, the large foreshocks sent people into the streets. This saved some lives, because the main shock came a few minutes after one of these large foreshocks. Many of the buildings and homes were vacant when they fell. Tsunamis The main shock produced tsunamis that were not only destructive along the coast of Chile, but which also caused numerous casualties and extensive property damage in Hawaii and Japan. Abnormal wave runup was noticeable along shorelines throughout the Pacific Ocean area. In Hawaii, 6,600 miles from the epicenter, the tsunami killed 61 and injured 282. The damage there was $75 million. In Japan, the coast of Honshu was especially ravaged. There were 138 deaths, 85 missing, 855 injured, and 1,678 homes destroyed, with a total of $50 million in damage. Reportedly there were 32 missing and presumed dead in the Phillippines. The coasts of California, New Zealand, Australia and Kamchatka were also affected. Associated Geologic Events There were several other geologic phenomena associated with this event. Subsidence caused by the earthquake produced local flooding and permanently altered the shorelines of much of the area in Chile impacted by the earthquake. Landslides were common on Chilean hillsides. Many of these rock falls and landslides occurred in the Andes. The Puyehue volcano erupted 47 hours after the main shock. Chile Earthquake History Chile has experienced other large earthquakes since the 1960 event. Both the March 3, 1985, earthquake and the July 30, 1995, earthquake, had magnitudes of about 8. Historically, magnitude 8 earthquakes in Chile occur every 10 to 25 years. Many of these earthquakes produce tsunamis that often travel far beyond the shores of Chile producing devastation. It is only a matter of time until Chile once again has a "world-class" earthquake whose impact, like the 1960 Chile event, will be felt around the world.
Citation
Title Great Chile Earthquake of May 22, 1960 - Anniversary Edition
publication  Date   2000
presentationForm
cited responsible party - publisher
organisation Name  DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCEI > National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
cited responsible party - originator
organisation Name  DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NGDC > National Geophysical Data Center, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce (comp)
cited responsible party - publisher
organisation Name  NOAA/NESDIS/National Geophysical Data Center
Contact information
Address
,,
Theme keywords (theme):
EARTH SCIENCE > SOLID EARTH > Tectonics-Faults
EARTH SCIENCE > SOLID EARTH >Seismology > Earthquake Occurrences
thesaurus name >
Title NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
Theme keywords (theme):
Disasters > Catastrophic Phenomena > Earthquakes
Disasters > Catastrophic Phenomena > Tsunamis
Lithosphere > Seismic Activity > Seismic Activity
thesaurus name >
Title Infoterra Keyword Thesaurus
Theme keywords (theme):
Interior and Crust
Natural Hazards
Photo
thesaurus name >
Title Uncontolled keywords
Theme keywords (theme):
oceans
geoscientificInformation
thesaurus name >
Title ISO Topic Keywords
Location keywords:
Chile
South America
thesaurus name >
Title NASA/GCMD Location Keywords
dataCenter Keywords
DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCEI > National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NGDC > National Geophysical Data Center, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
thesaurus name >
Title Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Data Center Keywords
revision  Date   2016-12-01
publication  Date   1995-04-24
Edition 8.4.1
cited responsible party - publisher
organisation Name  NASA
position Name GCMD User Support Office
Contact information
Address
electronic Mail Addressgcmduso@gcmd.gsfc.nasa.gov
Linkage for online resource
name GCMD Feedback Form
URL:http://gcmd.nasa.gov/MailComments/MailComments.jsf?rcpt=gcmduso
link function information
Description Have a Comment for the GCMD?
cited responsible party -
organisation Name
Contact information
Linkage for online resource
name GCMD's Science Keywords and Associated Directory Keywords
URL:http://gcmd.nasa.gov/learn/keyword_list.html
link function information
Description This page describes the NASA GCMD Keywords, how to reference those keywords and provides download instructions.
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Process > Geologic Processes
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Organization > GOVERNMENT AGENCIES-U.S. FEDERAL AGENCIES
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Realm > Subsurface
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Science Domain > Earth Science
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Process > Ocean Process
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Material > Chemical
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Feature > Marine Feature
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Feature > Environmental Feature
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Virtual International Authority File (VIAF) Corporate Names
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Process > Hydrologic Process
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
Theme keywords (theme):
thesaurus name >
Title Feature > Physiographic Feature
publication  Date   2017-08-24
other Citation Details  Cinergi keyword enhanced.File generated at Thu Aug 24 07:00:18 UTC 2017
purpose:
Make available Damage Photos for research and education
Browse image (thumbnail):
thumbnail file name: ...
file type: JPEG
thumbnail file description:  Valdivia suffered catastrophic damage because of its proximity to the epicenter of the massive quake. Regional tectonic subsidence of five to seven feet occurred. There was extensive loss to agricultural lands from flooding. The horizontal ground motions, not the subsidence, caused the principal damage to structures away from shorelines and river channels. Older masonry structures were hard hit by the earthquake. However, many wood frame buildings performed well.
Resource language:  eng; USA
Resource progress code:  completed
Resource Maintenance Information
maintenance or update frequency:  notPlanned
Constraints on resource usage:
Legal Constraints
Access Constraints  otherRestrictions
use constraint:  otherRestrictions
Other constraints
Access Constraints: None Use Constraints: None Distribution Liability: While every effort has been made to ensure that these data are accurate and reliable within the limits of the current state of the art, NOAA cannot assume liability for any damages caused by any errors or omissions in the data, nor as a result of the failure of the data to function on a particular system. NOAA makes no warranty, expressed or implied, nor does the fact of distribution constitute such a warranty.
Resource extent
Geographic Extent
Geographic Bounding Box
westBoundLongitude  -155
eastBoundLongitude  -72
northBoundLatitude  38
southBoundLatitude  -43
Temporal Extent
Publication Date 1960-05-22
Credits:
Patricia Lockrige
point of contact - pointOfContact
organisation Name  DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCEI> National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
position Name Hazards Data Manager
Contact information
Address
325 Broadway, Boulder, CO, 80305-3328 Country USA
electronic Mail Addresshaz.info@noaa.gov
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Scope of quality information
scope level  repository
Level Description
other component described  NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
Resource lineage description

Resource lineage description
Processing Step
date and time
description 35mm slide set is out of stock and will never be produced again. Distribution SOP has been deleted for the 35mm slide set.
processing agent contact - processor
individual Name Heather McCullough
organisation Name  DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NGDC > National Geophysical Data Center, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
Contact information
Telephone
Voice 303.497.6277
Fax 303.497.6513
Address
NOAA/NESDIS/NGDC E/GC1 325 Broadway, Boulder, CO, 80305-3328 Country USA
electronic Mail AddressHeather.McCullough@noaa.gov
hoursOfService 7:30 - 5:00 Mountain
contact Instructions
Contact Data Center
Completeness Commission
evaluation Method Description  unknown
Completeness Omission
evaluation Method Description  unknown
ConceptualConsistency
measure Description  unknown

Resource distribution information

Distributor
distributor contact - pointOfContact
organisation Name  DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCEI> National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
position Name Hazards Data Manager
Contact information
Address
325 Broadway, Boulder, CO, 80305-3328 Country USA
electronic Mail Addresshaz.info@noaa.gov
Standard ordering process
fees None
Ordering Instructions  Ordering Instructions: Product may be downloaded via: https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/nndc/struts/results?eq_1=45&t=101634&s=0&d=4&d=44 Custom Order Process: Contact Data Center for information
turnaround
None
Standard ordering process
fees $25.00 plus handling and shipment outside the USA
Ordering Instructions  Ordering Instructions: Product may be ordered via our online store at: http://ols.nndc.noaa.gov/plolstore/plsql/olstore.prodspecific?prodnum=G01268-CDR-A0001 Custom Order Process: Contact Data Center for information
turnaround
4 days
Format
Format name TIFF
Format version
Format
Format name TIFF
Format version
Digital Transfer Options
Linkage for online resource
URL:https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/nndc/struts/results?eq_1=37&t=101634&s=0&d=4&d=44
Linkage for online resource
URL:https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/nndc/struts/results?eq_1=45&t=101634&s=0&d=4&d=44
Linkage for online resource
URL:https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/hazard/
Linkage for online resource
URL:https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/nndc/struts/results?eq_1=45&t=101634&s=0&d=4&d=44
Linkage for online resource
URL:https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/hazardimages/
Digital Transfer Options
Medium of distribution
name  cdRom
medium Format  iso9660
Metadata data stamp:  2015-10-14
Resource Maintenance Information
maintenance or update frequency:
notes: This metadata was automatically generated from the Content Standard for Digital Geospatial Metadata: Extensions for Remote Sensing Metadata standard version FGDC-STD-012-2002 using the June 2011 version of the FGDC RSE to ISO 19115-2 transform. The Spatial Reference Information is not currently mapped over to ISO but will be mapped in future versions.
notes: This record was automatically modified on 2015-10-14 to include references to NCEI where applicable.
Metadata contact - pointOfContact
organisation Name  DOC/NOAA/NESDIS/NCEI> National Centers for Environmental Information, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce
position Name Hazards Data Manager
Contact information
Address
325 Broadway, Boulder, CO, 80305-3328 Country USA
electronic Mail Addresshaz.info@noaa.gov
Metadata scope code  dataset
Metadata language  eng; USA
Metadata character set encoding:   utf8
Metadata standard for this record:  ISO 19115-2 Geographic Information - Metadata - Part 2: Extensions for Imagery and Gridded Data
standard version:  ISO 19115-2:2009(E)
Metadata record identifier:  gov.noaa.ngdc.mgg.photos:G01935

Metadata record format is ISO19139-2 XML (MI_Metadata)