6.6
magnitude earthquake rattles Nicaragua
Magnitude-7.3 quake hits near Papua New Guinea
A 6.6 magnitude earthquake struck in Nicaragua on Friday, shaking buildings in the capital of Managua. The temblors were felt as far away as San Jose in Costa Rica.
RT,
11
April, 2014
An
initial earthquake earlier on Thursday evening left 200 people
injured and at least one fatality according to government officials.
Some 800 homes were damaged in Nagarote, a town 30 miles northwest of
Managua.
Authorities
reported that the single confirmed fatality thus far, a 23-year-old
woman, had died of an apparent heart attack.
The
latest quake’s epicenter was located 15 miles south of the town of
Granada, close to the country’s Pacific coastline, at a depth of 86
miles.
Due
to the depth of the quake no tsunami was expected, the US National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said.
Nicaraguan
authorities had ordered the demolition of two old buildings due to
structural concerns, which had survived the country’s devastating
1972 quake, which killed 10,000 people.
The
country has been placed on its highest level earthquake alert
following yesterday’s temblors. Some schools were closed as a
result, and 155 residents in at-risk areas were evacuated, reported
the AP.
Government
buildings in Managua were evacuated as a precaution ahead of the
multiple aftershocks following the 6.1 quake, which occurred at a far
shallower depth of 6.2 miles, knocking out power and phone service in
some areas of the capital, reported Reuters.
Magnitude-7.3 quake hits near Papua New Guinea
12
April, 2014
A
7.3-magnitude earthquake has struck off Papua New Guinea's
Bougainville Island.
The
quake was centred about 75km southwest of the main town of Arawa at a
depth of about 50km on Friday.
The
Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said a destructive widespread tsunami
was not expected but waves could be generated along coasts in the
area from a tremor of that magnitude.
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