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Nepal and Northern India are not overdue for a huge earthquake

Many researchers thought that earthquakes in the Himalayas recur at regular intervals – but an analysis of sediment cores has shown they are largely random, and the region has seen far more than we previously realised

By Alec Luhn

11 February 2026

Core samples from a lake in Nepal reveal a random pattern of historical earthquakes

Zakaria Ghazoui-Schaus, BAS

While some have argued that northern India and western Nepal are overdue for a massive earthquake, an analysis says this is a myth, as the area has been experiencing smaller earthquakes at random for millennia.

It is common for officials and media to call populated areas near fault lines – like Istanbul, Seattle and Tokyo – “overdue” for violent earthquakes. Because the central Himalaya fault segment in India and Nepal last had a major recorded earthquake in 1505, some has suggested that earthquakes there recur about every 500 years, making a great earthquake now imminent.

But scientists have now found at least 50 earthquakes of magnitude 6.5 or larger that have occurred in this area in the past 6000 years, . And these earthquakes have been occurring randomly, not at regular intervals.

“We have to stop discussing and having long debates over the periodicity of earthquakes in the Himalayas and come to an agreement that it’s a random process … and consider the risk within that framework,” says at the British Antarctic Survey, who led the study.

The collision of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates that cast up the Himalayan mountains continues to this day, forming one of the largest seismic zones on the planet. The 2400-kilometre fault under the mountain range generates violent earthquakes, such as the magnitude 7.8 disaster that killed nearly 9000 people in and around Kathmandu in 2015.

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However, less evidence of earthquakes has been found on the central segment of the fault immediately to the west of the Nepali capital, leading to fears that pressure was building up in this “seismic gap” and would soon be released in a devastating earthquake of magnitude 8 or 9.

Ghazoui-Schaus argues this was a misconception based on a “knowledge gap” rather than a seismic gap. Researchers have typically looked for evidence of earthquakes in the Himalayas by digging trenches to find ruptures in what was the ground surface in the past. While this method was able to uncover large earthquakes, it missed smaller “shadow earthquakes” that didn’t break the surface.

“You are only going to have a very sparse record of the largest earthquakes” with traditional paleo-seismology methods, says , a retired seismologist from the British Geological Survey. “Whereas for historical earthquakes, then the catalogue can be good down to about magnitude 4 or so.”

Because the record was primarily populated with large earthquakes, it led to calculations of a long “interevent interval,” also known as a “return period,” which is the average time between earthquakes of a certain magnitude in an area.

To uncover a better earthquake record in the central Himalaya, Ghazoui-Schaus and his colleagues trekked to Lake Rara in western Nepal in 2013 and took a 4-metre sediment core from the lakebed with an inflatable raft.

The research team prepares equipment for sediment core sampling at Rara Lake in Nepal

Zakaria Ghazoui-Schaus, BAS

They later analysed the core for turbidites, layers of fine sediments on top of coarser ones, which were deposited on the lakebed by underwater landslides triggered by earthquakes. The team has now identified 50 earthquakes of magnitude 6.5 or greater over the past 6000 years, dating each according to its depth in the core. These have likely released energy and lessened tension in the fault, Ghazoui-Schaus says.

Statistical analysis found that the earthquakes tended to come in clusters, but these clusters occurred randomly. While that is what most seismologists would now expect based on the modern instrument record, Ghazoui-Schaus says it is one of the first times a paleo-seismological record has also confirmed it.

“If I have to build a house in western Nepal, I would definitely be more cautious in the way that I would build,” he says. And even though earthquakes occur at random, calculating the average interval between them can still be useful as an indicator of seismic activity that could damage structures in an area like bridges or dams, according to Musson.

“If you’re planning for the next 100 years, you want to know how many earthquakes of a certain size are going to occur in that period,” he says. “And if you are prepared for that, then it doesn’t matter whether the earthquake happens next year or in 10 years’ time, because you’ve built your dam strong enough.”

Journal reference

Science Advances

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