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7.9 Quake in Peru, at least 337 dead.
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RJT
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070816...DWH0kD5VzKs0NUE

quote:

LIMA, Peru - A powerful 7.9-magnitude earthquake shook Peru's coast near the capital, killing at least 337 people and injuring 827, the Civil Defense said early Thursday.
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Civil Defense Commander Aristides Mussio released the figures on Peru's state television station, saying Wednesday's earthquake killed one person in Lima and 336 in the region of Ica, south of the capital.

The Civil Defense death toll of 337 first appeared on its Web site, but the organization's spokesman, Dario Ariola, refused to confirm the figure, which was much higher the numbers provided by the health minister. But minutes later Mussio appeared on television to announce the new death toll.

In the town of Pisco, "the dead are scattered by the dozens on the streets," Mayor Juan Mendoza told Lima radio station CPN, sobbing.

He said at least 200 people were buried under the rumble of a church that collapsed while they were attending a religious service.

"We don't have lights, water, communications. Most houses have fallen, churches, stores, hotels, everything is destroyed," Mendoza said.

Seventeen others were killed when a church collapsed in the city of Ica, home to 650,000 people, according to cable news station Canal N.

The government rushed police, soldiers, doctors and aid to Ica, but an APTN cameraman trying to reach the city reported that traffic was paralyzed on the Pan American Highway by giant cracks in the pavement and fallen power lines. He said hundreds of vehicles were backed up.

News reports said dozens of people were crowding hospitals in the city seeking help even though the hospitals had suffered cracks and other structural damage.

Ica was blacked out as were smaller towns along the coast south of Lima. Residents of Chincha, a small town 90 miles southeast of Lima, reported that walls of homes had fallen in and numerous people had been hurt by falling bricks and broken glass.

An APTN cameraman who reached Chincha said he counted 30 bodies under bloody sheets on floor of the hospital, which was badly damaged.

The U.S. Geological Survey said Wednesday's earthquake hit at 6:40 p.m. (7:40 p.m. EDT) about 90 miles southeast of Lima at a depth of about 25 miles. Four strong aftershocks ranging from magnitudes of 5.4 to 5.9 were felt afterward.

The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued a tsunami warning for the coasts of Peru, Chile, Ecuador, Colombia, Costa Rica and Panama. A tsunami watch was issued for the rest of Central America and Mexico and an advisory for Hawaii.

The center canceled all the alerts after about two hours, but it said the quake had caused an estimated 10-inch tsunami near the epicenter.

"It wasn't big enough to be destructive," said Stuart Weinstein, the center's assistant director.

An Associated Press photographer said that some homes had collapsed in the center of Lima and that many people had fled into the streets for safety. The capital shook for more than a minute.

"This is the strongest earthquake I've ever felt," said Maria Pilar Mena, 47, a sandwich vendor in Lima. "When the quake struck, I thought it would never end."

Antony Falconi, 27, was desperately trying to get public transportation home as hundreds of people milled on the streets flagging down buses in the dark.

"Who isn't going to be frightened?" Falconi said. "The earth moved differently this time. It made waves and the earth was like jelly."

The quake also knocked out telephone and mobile phone service in the capital and to the provinces, making it impossible to communicate with the Ica area.

Firefighters were called to put out a fire in a shopping center. State doctors called off a national strike that began on Wednesday to handle the emergency.

Police reported that large boulders shook loose from hills and were blocking the country's Central Highway, which heads east into the Andes mountains.

President Alan Garcia also said public schools would be closed Thursday because the buildings may be unsafe.

The last time a quake of magnitude 7.0 or larger struck Peru was in September 2005, when a 7.5 magnitude earthquake rocked Peru's northern jungle, killing four people. In 2001, a 7.9-magnitude quake struck near the southern Andean city of Arequipa, killing 71 people.

The latest Peru quake occurred in a subduction zone where one section of the Earth's crust dives under another, said USGS geophysicist Dale Grant at the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colorado.

Some of the world's biggest quakes strike in subduction zones including the catastrophic Indian Ocean temblor in 2004 that generated deadly tsunami waves.


That is a MASSIVE earthquake - depending on what news you're reading (I unfortunately only really read Yahoo and the BBC at the moment - and their coverage is a bit minimal) some media are reporting at least 100 more dead, with several more being reported but not confirmed.

Absolutely horrible.
StanVoid
they're now saying it was a 7.9 quake, which is even stronger than the 7.8 quake in San Francisco 1906.
RJT
quote:
Originally posted by StanVoid
they're now saying it was a 7.9 quake, which is even stronger than the 7.8 quake in San Francisco 1906.


What's even scarier to me is that in the last 6 years, they've now had 3 7+ quakes in Peru - granted, it's sitting right on a massively active fault line, but still... that's a lot of huge quakes in pretty short period of time.

We obviously don't get them in Wisconsin - so I have no idea what they're like, but I imagine the big ones are pretty ing creepy. My roommate had lived in Hawaii for 6 months and they had a pretty large one while she was there (though it was the "norm" for many on the island), and just the way she described it sounded so eerie.
_Nut_
I went through a 6.5 in Hawaii last year. It is one of the most F'd feelings I've ever felt/heard. It woke me up out of a sleep.... at first I thought it was thunder because it was low low low rumbling. It lasted for a moment or so. From what Ive been told, that was the initial P Wave firing out ahead of the initial wave. Then the deepest rumbling and hardest shaking I've ever felt occurred. Things shifted left and right and it was intense and lasted for about 20-30 seconds.
MrJiveBoJingles
I was once awoken in the night by an earthquake in rural Texas. Lasted about ten seconds.

That was pretty odd.
tubularbills
yeah i read about this online at work tonight. sucks.

good thing it was on land tho - and not an underwater one, that would have sent a tsunami into peru...
d-miurge
Wow, sad news.:nervous:
pvdAngel
Yeah, heard it this morning. Really sad. Just makes you feel more fortunate if you live in a safe-ish area.
Allied Nations
quote:
Originally posted by tubularbills
yeah i read about this online at work tonight. sucks.

good thing it was on land tho - and not an underwater one, that would have sent a tsunami into peru...


Not always.. but one of this magnitude, probably. There was plenty of offshore quakes under 5.0 when I was living there that resulted in some big waves, but nothing of tsunami proportion.


When I was living in Lima tremors were pretty normal... We had earthquake drills at school and I remember feeling tremors at least once every couple months...

It was always fun when we miss part of class due to having to all go outside in the field because of a tremor or something :p


It seems most everyone living in Lima is ok, haven't heard anything negative back from any of my friends.... Hopefully it stays that way!
Lebezniatnikov
When I went to bed last night they were worried about a tsunami in the south Pacific or Hawaii... it appears that danger has passed at least. Natural disasters are always doubly tragic in that there's so little victims can do about it.

Boomer187
quote:

it said the quake had caused an estimated 10-inch tsunami near the epicenter.

"It wasn't big enough to be destructive," said Stuart Weinstein, the center's assistant director.




it did cause a tsunami!!!




such a sad thing, especially since a lot of the death were in churches :-/ and many more may be caused by slowly getting elect and water back up and running.
nchs09
7.9 is preatty big:nervous:


we get them in guatemala all the time.... maybe 5's. i know we had a huge one in guatemala when my parents were young.

quote:
En la madrugada del 4 de febrero de 1976, Guatemala despertó sobresaltada por un fuerte sismo. Eran las 3:03:33 horas. La fase de destrucción duró solamente 49 segundos, y la intensidad fue de 7.6° en la escala de Richter, aproximadamente la energía equivalente a la explosión de 2 mil toneladas de dinamita.
it says it was a 7.6 that lasted for 49 seconds.


23,000 dead. my parents said it was the worst ever, and they lived through a civil war lol:nervous:
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