BEIJING, Aug. 11 -- An expert from the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE) on Friday refuted some online speculation that the Three Gorges Dam could have been related to the 7.0-magnitude quake that hit southwest China's Sichuan Province Tuesday.
The epicenter of the quake was located near three fault zones, where frequent seismic activity makes the area earthquake-prone, according to Chen Houqun, an academician with the CAE.
Chen attributed the quake to the Indochina block's northward movement.
"The Three Gorges Dam and its major reservoirs were built along the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, which are not in the same geologic structural unit as the fault zones that caused the Jiuzhaigou earthquake," said Chen.
"The dam has no connection with the fault zones that caused the quake in terms of geologic structure," he added.
Chen also refuted the claim that the quake was reservoir-triggered, or a reservoir-induced seismic activity (RIS).
"A lot of research was done before the construction of the Three Gorges Dam to evaluate possibilities of RIS," said Chen. "The dam was built in a geologically stable area."
Of all the existing reservoirs in the world, only four have triggered earthquakes that are above 6.0 in magnitude, according to Chen.
An expert from the China Earthquake Networks Center (CENC) also clarified matters concerning the frequency of China's earthquakes in an interview with Xinhua.
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