20 November, 2025
A record-setting earthquake in Myanmar challenges how scientists predict future seismic hazards.
When a devastating magnitude 7.7 earthquake struck central Myanmar in March 2025, it didn’t just shake the ground — it challenged long-held assumptions in earthquake science itself.
Starting near the city of Mandalay, the rupture went right through what some may have considered a “safe” zone, a known seismic gap that had been quiet for nearly two centuries, and then continued for another 160 kilometers.
For decades, scientists have used the concept of seismic gaps, quiet sections along fault lines that have not broken in a long time, to estimate where large earthquakes are likely to occur. The central Sagaing Fault in Myanmar seemed to fit that model perfectly: a locked section that had not ruptured since 1839, bordered by segments that had already released their stress in earlier events.
But the 2025 earthquake defied that logic. Using a combination of satellite imaging, global seismic recordings, and computer simulations, KAUST researchers have now discovered that the rupture extended an astonishing 460 kilometers along the Sagaing Fault, one of the longest strike-slip ruptures ever observed on land.
Their analyses revealed a two-stage process. “The earthquake began with a slower bilateral rupture that spread north and south from near Mandalay,” explains Bo Li, a research scientist at KAUST and the study’s lead author. “Then, within about 20 seconds, it transitioned into a supershear rupture, moving faster than seismic shear waves, almost like a sonic boom in rock.”
This supershear behavior, sustained over more than 350 kilometers, generated intense ground shaking that was felt far beyond the fault itself. The earthquake caused widespread devastation across Myanmar and neighboring regions, including Bangkok, over 1,000 kilometers from the epicenter, and claimed more than 5,000 lives.
To understand how such an extraordinary rupture could happen, the team combined data from satellites with dynamic rupture simulations — supercomputer models that reproduce how faults break and slip in real-time. The simulations, run on KAUST’s Shaheen III supercomputer, revealed that the seismic gap boundary was not a strong mechanical barrier after all.
“The key was where the earthquake started,” Li says. “It nucleated far away from the gap boundary, in an area already primed for failure. By the time the rupture reached the boundary, it had enough momentum to burst right through.”
Read more at KAUST Discovery.