Friday, August 31, 2012

Tsunami alert after 7.6-quake hits Philippines save

QUAKE strikes east of the Philippines, triggering tsunami warnings across the region. There is no threat to Australia

A 7.6-MAGNITUDE quake struck off the eastern coast of the Philippines, killing at least one person, knocking out power in several towns and generating negligible tsunami surges.


The quake struck at a depth of 34 kilometres in the Pacific Ocean about 140 kilometres from the Philippines, leading to tsunami warnings across its east coast and as far away as Indonesia, Japan and Papua New Guinea.
A series of small waves ranging from 16-centimetres to 50 centimetres hit the eastern Philippines about two hours after the quake, according to local authorities, but there were no reports of major damage.
The US Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre shortly afterwards lifted its tsunami warnings for the Philippines and Indonesia. It had earlier cancelled similar warnings for Japan, Taiwan and several Pacific islands.
The warnings led to a burst of terror for residents along the east coast of the Philippines, many of whom were without electricity because power lines had been cut during the earthquake that hit at 8:47pm (10:47pm AEST).
Leticia Amos, 35, a government employee, said hundreds of families on Samar island rushed to a hillside area, carrying their belongings as soon as the alert was raised.
"It is very dark, there is no electricity and everyone is panicking," she said.
"Our place is on a hilly portion along the highway, and hundreds of people from low lying bayside areas rushed here."
The quake shook large areas of the east, and one person was confirmed killed when a landslide engulfed her home in Cagayan de Oro City.
"There's a 60-year-old woman who died and a five-year-old girl who was injured. There was a small landslide," civil defence chief Benito Ramos said on DZMM radio.
"The quake occurred amid strong rain, so the earth shook loose and there was a landslide."
Paula Daza, the governor of northern Samar province, one of the areas closest to where the quake struck, said there were reports of damage to infrastructure.
"Some cracks appeared on concrete roads, and at the base of at least one bridge," he said.
Sol Matugas, the governor of another eastern region, Surigao del Norte, said on DZMM radio that the quake had severely shaken homes.
"We were rather frightened. For the first time, we saw objects falling out of our cabinets," he said.
The USGS had initially reported the quake as having a magnitude of 7.9, but revised it to 7.6

Philippines Earthquake

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