6.2-magnitude
earthquake hits lower North Island
The centre of the quake zone.
A
"severe'' magnitude 6.2 quake has damaged homes and closed roads
in the lower North Island, toppling walls and chimneys and sending
rockfalls across roads.
17 January, 2014
The quake, initially
reported as a magnitude 6.3, struck 10km north of Castlepoint in
Wairarapa, at a depth of 33km, at 3.52pm, GeoNet said.
Sara Page, GeoNet public
information specialist at GNS Science, said GeoNet had received more
than 6000 "felt" reports from the public by 4.30pm, with
some reporting damage.
"As expected after a
quake of this size, there have been multiple aftershocks, and these
will continue for some time as the region settles," she said.
The Wairarapa is no
stranger to large earthquakes, with two very damaging magnitude 7
quakes in 1942.
However, the region's
last earthquake above magnitude 6 was in 1961.
Damage reports
There have been no
reports of injuries but emergency services have reported damage to
roads and buildings in the lower North Island.
Most of the damage was
reported in the Wairarapa and Palmerston North areas.
Fire Service central
communications shift manager Mike Wanoa said there were no reports of
major damage so far, but firefighters were "extremely busy''.
"The earthquake has
been reasonably major in the Masterton-Eketahuna area, so we're
getting multiple calls to all sorts of things at the moment, but
we're right in the middle of it now.''
There were reports of
fires, alarm activations and lines down. A lot of the damage was in
the Wairarapa and Palmerston North areas, Mr Wanoa said.
Inspector Mike Coleman of
police central communications said there were reports of damage to
houses in Eketahuna, including broken windows, collapsed walls and
fallen chimneys.
The number of reports of
damage remained unknown.
"Obviously some
houses have been damaged,'' Mr Coleman said.
"Windows have been
smashed and crockery has been thrown around the place - the usual
sort of movement with earthquakes.''
The centre of the quake zone.
Mr Coleman said there
were rocks and debris on roads between Woodville and Taihape due to
various slips.
The Manawatu Gorge road
was down to one lane, while the road between Pahiatua and Palmerston
North was closed.
Bridges and roads around
Eketahuna were being checked, Mr Coleman said.
Transport Agency
spokesman Ewart Barnsley says the organisation is unaware so far of
any serious damage to state highways in the Wellington region, but is
still checking, and is urging motorists to drive carefully.
Mr Barnley said the
agency believed major road bridges from Wellington to Masterton had
survived the earthquake, but had yet get to the bottom of reports of
possible rock falls in the northern Wairarapa.
"We have got all our
contractors out, but the problem is that the phone system is being
heavily used at the moment."
A Wellington Free
Ambulance spokesman said: "Wellington Free Ambulance has had no
callouts as a result of the earthquake. However, we have gone into
emergency management mode just to be safe.''
Tranz Metro said all
train services in the region had been suspended due to the quake.
The New Zealand Transport
Agency said teams were busy checking the road network for damage but
everything seemed to be okay.
Power is out in Linton,
south of Palmerston North.
A spokeswoman for the
Earthquake Commission (EQC) said the agency was still gathering
information on the quake and the volume of calls received.
One of the two giant
eagles hanging from the roof of Wellington airport to promote the
Hobbit trilogy did fall down as a result of the shaking.
The Weta Workshop eagles
each weigh 2 tonnes, have a wingspan of 15m, and were suspended from
the roof by eight cables.
Greg Thomas from
Wellington Airport said one of the eagles slowly became detached
during the quake and had come to rest on the floor.
He said it was still
partly suspended, and no one was injured when it came down.
The quake had not caused
any other damage at the airport. A runway inspection had been carried
out and the airport had been cleared to continue operating.
No flights had been
disrupted, he said.
The giant eagle hanging from the roof of Wellington airport to promote the Hobbit trilogy has fallen down due to the shake. Photo / Kylie Te Moanaui
'This one came with a bang'
Karen Monk, who is on a
farm in Mauriceville, just north of Masterton, said the quake was
"really violent''.
"My baby daughter
was in her cot asleep and I managed to leap across the hall and grab
her and leap outside onto the lawn,'' she said.
They had stayed outside
for about half an hour while aftershocks rolled through.
Ms Monk said the quake
was sudden and violent, compared to the usual rolling shakes.
"It was certainly
the biggest we've had since we've been here.
"It was really
sudden. Usually the earthquakes we feel up here, whether they're from
north or south, they're more rolling and you start start with a
gentle shake.
"This one just came
with a bang, with massive jolting.''
She said the contents of
the pantry had spilled onto the floor, shelves tipped over. Almost
every room in the wooden villa had cracks in the walls.
"We're on a farm
here and the animals don't normally react to quakes but the horses
were running around for a good 10 minutes afterwards. The sheep are
all huddled together. That's really unusual.''
An office worker in
Masterton described the tremor as "a good quake - one of the
best''.
"It was a roll
rather than a jolt. It was not very long but it was long enough - it
lasted about 20 seconds.''
Pam Lochore, wife of All
Black great Sir Brian Lochore, said photographs had fallen off
shelves in the couple's Masterton living room.
The shaking also caused
water in the pool to "rock side to side'' and a "rugby ball
went flying across the room''.
Raumati South resident
Leigh Nichols was at her beachside bach when the quake hit.
"It was huge. The
noise - it was like a train going along the track. It was so noisy,
everything was just rattling.''
Mrs Nichols said a wine
glass smashed and DVDs spilled to the floor. Her husband David
clutched a wooden statue to prevent it tumbling over.
"It was the noise
that got me, not the shaking. I just stood here. I don't get
frightened, I'm fascinated.''
Asked how the quake
compared to the big Seddon shakes in July last year, she said: "I
think it was just as bad, at least.''
Mrs Nichols was about to
head to her Raumati interior design store, Furnishing Affair, to
check merchandise for damage.
"If it's only
things, it's only things. But gosh it was big.''
In North Wairarapa
crockery broke, fridge doors were flung open spilling food onto
kitchen floors and disheartened homeowners described the aftermath as
"a bloody mess''.
In Masterton initial
reports showed there was little damage in shops although some
crockery had been broken.
Anders Crofoot, owner of
Castlepoint Station on the east coast of Wairarapa, said it was "the
best shake we've had in 15 years''.
"Stuff off the
shelves, stuff off walls, but nothing that we've come across that's
too major,'' he said.
He said the shaking went
on for about 40 seconds.
"I was up in the
office and it was long enough to think about it and then get
downstairs and outside and it was still going.''
He would now be checking
the farm water supply for damage. "There's a high probability
with some of these old pipes that there'll be a problem.''
Electricity retailer
Powershop, which has its headquarters in Masterton, tweeted that it
had evacuated its call centre following the earthquake.
The company said it would
continue responding to email queries as best it could.
A DB Breweries
spokeswoman said they had checked with staff at the Tui Brewery in
Mangatainoka and there appeared to be no damage as a result of the
quake.
Fonterra said all staff
at the Paihiatua plant are safe but power is currently out and they
are still checking the plant for damage.
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