7.6
aftershock hits same area of northern Chile as Tuesday's 8.2 quake
A 7.6-magnitude aftershock has rocked the same area of northern Chile where a massive 8.2 earthquake struck on Tuesday. The earlier quake, which caused a tsunami, killed six people and forced almost one million others to evacuate.
RT,
3
April, 2014
The
Wednesday quake occurred just before 02:43 GMT off the northern coast
of Chile, 19 km (14 miles) south of Iquique, according to the US
Geological Survey (USGS). The epicenter of the latest quake was
located at a shallow depth of 40 km (24.9 miles).
Chile’s
emergency ministry has ordered a preventative evacuation along the
northern Chilean coastline.
However
there have been no official reports of damage or injury in Chile or
Peru, according to Reuters.
A
tsunami warning issued for Chile and Peru has been canceled,
according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.
“Based
on all available data a destructive Pacific-wide tsunami is not
expected,”
it said earlier. However minor tsunami waves did hit the northern
coast of the country.
Chilean
President Michelle Bachelet has been evacuated from the Arica coast,
local media has reported.
Aftershocks
measuring magnitudes of 5.6 and 5.8 occurred after the 7.6 quake,
according to the USGS. Both were located around 70 to 75 km (43 to 46
miles) southwest of Inquique.
Image
from maps.google.com
Another
strong aftershock, measured at magnitude 6.4, also struck 47 km (29
miles) west of Iquique at around 01:58 GMT Wednesday evening.
This
comes one day after an 8.2 magnitude quake
hit 95 km (59 miles) northwest of the same area, around Iquique.
After
Tuesday’s quake, tsunami warnings spurred the evacuation of 900,000
people and 11 hospitals along the coastline, government officials
said.
At
least six people died following the quake, Chile's Interior Minister
Rodrigo Penailillo said. Many of the victims died from heart attacks
or falling debris.
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