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7/22/2020

Powerful 7.8 earthquake jolts Alaska towns, produces small tsunami

ANCHORAGE, Alaska: A powerful earthquake off Alaska's south coast rocked some coastal groups on Tuesday night, and some residents briefly rushed to an upper floor for fear of a tsunami.


There was no instant examination of the damage to the sparsely populated part of the kingdom, and the tsunami precaution was canceled after the 7.8 magnitude earthquake on the Alaska Peninsula affected produced a much less wave than what was happening.

According to the US Geological Survey, the earthquake struck Tuesday at 10:12 p.m. Near weather, targeting waters sixty-five miles (one hundred and five kilometers) south-southeast of Perryville, Alaska at an intensity of 17 miles (28 km).

Due to their size, neighboring communities along the Alaska Peninsula have no longer experienced tremors that would normally be related to the value of an earthquake, said Michael West, a state seismologist. from Alaska.

But that doesn't mean they slept for it: West said citizens of small towns within 100 miles of the earthquake reported a very strong tremor and felt more than 800 miles away in the area. Anchorage, West said. .

"There is no examination of the damage," said Kodiak police sergeant. Mike Sorter reported to The Associated Press early Wednesday morning. “No accidents have been said. The entire lot is nominal.

Kodiak is located about two hundred miles northeast of where the earthquake becomes a target.

The tsunami warning prompted coastal residents to evacuate through the highlands. Social media posts have shown long strains of humans fleeing cities like Homer and Kodiak as tsunami sirens sounded throughout history.

On Kodiak Island, the local high school opened its doors to evacuees, as did the local Catholic university, the Daily Anchorage newspaper reported.

“We have been given full human faculty,” said Larry LeDoux, superintendent of the Kodiak school district. "I wear masks because the first siren sounded," the daily newspaper said.

"Everything is as quiet as it gets. We have probably three hundred and four hundred humans, all wearing masks," he said before the warning was canceled.

Tsunami warnings are common for people who grew up in Kodiak.

“I did this because I was a boy,” LeDoux told the newspaper. "Old News".

Officials at the National Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska, began to suspend tsunami warnings and warnings after a single 10-inch wave was recorded in the community of Sand Point.

“I could have predicted a little more water, but I'm glad I didn't,” said David Hale, the Tsunami Center's senior scientist.

Tuesday's earthquake was more powerful than the massive 7.1 earthquake that damaged the Anchorage area in November 2018.

"This earthquake released about 15 times more electricity than this earthquake," said West, the country's seismologist.

More than a dozen aftershocks of importance four. Zero or more was suggested shortly after the earthquake, he said using a smartphone from the Alaska Earthquake Center at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks.

“We have people here who will be working all night,” West said Wednesday morning. "These lines will move, go, cross and go."

The Alaska-Aleutian trench also became a major 9/2 earthquake in 1964 which became a target. It remains the second most efficient earthquake on record. The quake and the resulting tsunami caused widespread damage and killed 131 humans, some from a distance like Oregon and California. Alaska is the most active seismic nation. Nearly 25,000 earthquakes were recorded in Alaska due to Jan. 1, according to the center.



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