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elleng

(130,920 posts)
Sun Nov 20, 2016, 01:47 AM Nov 2016

Italys Zone of Endless Shaking

NORCIA, Italy — Over centuries, residents of this Umbrian city and its environs have grown accustomed to the ragged tempo of earthquakes in the mountainous region. Resilience is a point of local pride. But the quake that struck on Oct. 30, the strongest to hit Italy in 36 years, was drastically different. As Mayor Nicola Alemanno of Norcia put it, some quakes are “cataclysms that generate catastrophes.”

Ancient buildings collapsed. Families who had lived in stone houses for generations were left homeless. In Norcia, the quake forced a mass evacuation and destroyed the basilica of St. Benedict, pictured above, as well as towns in the Marche region, like Visso, below.

The Oct. 30 quake was catastrophic, but hardly a one-off event. Since Aug. 24, the broader area has endured some 28,500 earthquakes and aftershocks, with at least 47 above 4.0 magnitude. Some have cracked buildings; some have merely rattled dishes in cupboards. Others have not been felt at all. But every day the earth is still moving.

Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has pledged to rebuild dozens of stricken towns “as they were,” but first temporary housing must be built for the thousands who have remained homeless in villages like San Pellegrino di Norcia, below.

Thousands of residents of evacuated towns have been moved to hotels on Italy’s Adriatic coast and in towns inland. But many have refused to leave. Older people, whose families have lived here for generations, are afraid they won’t return. Farmers refuse to abandon their livestock. Many towns have set up makeshift camps in sports centers like one, below, in the Marche community of Cessapalombo. . .

This should be a time of pleasure in Umbria. It is a popular tourist region, famed for its art, food and stunning, ancient vistas, like that overlooking the village of Poggio Primocaso. But hotels have registered countless cancellations, even in areas unaffected by the earthquake.

Tourism is Norcia’s livelihood, said the Rev. Benedict Nivakoff of the monastery of St. Benedict here. “If they lose that, they don’t know how they’re going to live.”'

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/20/world/europe/italy-earthquake-zone.html?

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