7.0
magnitude earthquake strikes Alaska’s Aleutian Islands
30
August, 2013
August
30, 2013 – ANCHORAGE,
Alaska — Officials
say a magnitude 7.0 earthquake
has rocked Alaska’s Aleutian Islands with a jet-like rumble that
shook homes and sent residents scrambling for cover. There are no
immediate reports of damage or injuries from the major temblor at
8:25 a.m. Friday, local time. It was followed by multiple
aftershocks, including one measuring magnitude 4.5. The Alaska
Earthquake Information Center says the primary earthquake was
centered 67 miles southwest of Adak, Alaska, and shaking lasted up to
one minute. The village is about 1,200 miles southwest of Anchorage.
The earthquake didn’t trigger a tsunami warning, but Michael Burgy
with the West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer,
Alaska, says the center is monitoring for potential tsunamis caused
by landslides, either on land or under water. –SF
Gate
Activity
increases at Alaskan Volcano:
JUNEAU,
AK —
Scientists reported increased activity at one of Alaska’s largest
volcanoes on Friday, but geologist Chris Waythomas said it was
unrelated to the earthquake that shook the Aleutian Islands that
morning. Waythomas said the increased seismicity at the Veniaminof
Volcano, on the Alaska Peninsula, started before the
magnitude 7.0 earthquake
struck, and the two are too far apart. The Alaska Volcano Observatory
reported increased activity, including lava fountaining and ash
emissions up to 20,000 feet, from the volcano on Friday morning.
Waythomas, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey at the
observatory, said scientists have been monitoring increased activity
at the site since early June. He said the volcano has had some
significant past eruptions but nothing that scientists are seeing now
suggests anything major is in the works this time. Rather, he
suspects there will be a protracted period of the same kind of
activity that scientists have been watching. Veniaminof is about 480
miles southwest of Anchorage; Perryville is the nearest community to
the volcano, about 20 miles away, and it received trace amounts of
ash fall Friday, Waythomas said — like a dusting on the windshields
of vehicles. Depending on how the wind blows, the Chignik area also
could see some ash but amounts should be minimal, and there could be
some impact on local air travel, he said. According to the
observatory, the volcano, which has an ice-filled summit caldera, is
one of the most active volcanic centers in the Aleutian Arc. It has
erupted at least 13 times in the past 200 years, with what were
characterized as minor ash-producing explosions in 2002, 2004, 2005,
2006 and 2008. Waythomas said steam has been observed coming off the
lava flow as it hits the ice. But he said the lava has not been
melting a lot of ice, so there is not a perceived flood hazard.
–Anchorage
Daily News
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.