North Korea nuclear crisis: Test 'caused landslides'

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Picture of landslides at Punggye-riImage source, Planet / 38 North
Image caption,

The pictures released by 38 North appear to show several landslides near the peak of Mount Mantap

North Korea's recent nuclear test appears to have triggered several landslides, according to what are believed to be the first satellite images of the aftermath.

Sunday's test took place underground at the mountainous Punggye-ri site.

Analysis group 38 North published pictures, external which show "more numerous and widespread" disturbances than before.

The test unleashed a powerful 6.3-magnitude tremor which was felt across the border in China.

North Korea has conducted six nuclear tests so far, all at Punggye-ri, which consists of a system of tunnels dug beneath a mountainous region.

38 North said its latest pictures, which were taken a day after the latest test, showed landslides as well as numerous areas of gravel and scree fields which were "lofted" from the tremors.

Lofting occurs when shockwaves force material to be lifted up from the ground, and the material falls back down in the same place.

Image source, Planet / 38 North
Image caption,

A close-up of the Punggye-ri test site as photographed days before the test...

Image source, Planet / 38 North
Image caption,

...and the same area seen on Monday

The disturbances took place near Mount Mantap, the highest point in the test site.

They were "more numerous and widespread than what we have seen from any of the five tests North Korea previously conducted", the site's analysis said.

But it added that while the test triggered a powerful tremor, it did not appear to have caused the crater to collapse.

Some experts believe however that the nuclear test did cause an underground tunnel at Punggye-ri to collapse.

Image source, Planet / 38 North
Image caption,

A wider shot of Punggye-ri before the test shows the mountainous region covered in green vegetation

Image source, Planet / 38 North
Image caption,

A picture taken after the test show more brown patches along mountain ridges, seen as evidence of landslides

Sunday's bomb was thought to have had a power range from 50 to 120 kilotonnes. A 50kt device would be about three times the size of the US bomb that destroyed Hiroshima in 1945.

The repeated tests have prompted concerns about the test site's longevity, although experts are divided.

Media caption,

Nuclear North Korea: What do we know?

Earlier this week Chinese scientists warned of the possibility of the mountain caving in and releasing radiation after future tests, reported the South China Morning Post., external

A previous 38 North commentary debunked the possibility, external of the tests triggering a volcanic eruption.