Strong
earthquake shakes northern Chile, kills at least two
SANTIAGO
Petroleumworld.com
11 15 07
A strong earthquake measuring 7.7 rocked arid
northern Chile Wednesday, killing at least two people, injuring others, sparking
panic and causing power outages.
Authorities said two women, one aged 88 and the other 54 died when they were
crushed under collapsing walls in the city of Tocopilla, 1,600 kilometers (1,000
miles) north of Santiago, doctors said.
Local authorities said at least 45 people were injured, but media reports put
the figure at about 100.
"It is a major quake," Fernandez said of the temblor that struck at
12:43 pm (1543 GMT.)
The epicenter was located 1,260 kilometers (783 miles) north of the Chilean capital
Santiago. It was felt as far away as Bolivia's capital, La Paz, high in the Andes
to the northeast.
Images from Chile's TVN television showed cars crushed by debris, and frightened
people running onto the streets as the quake struck.
Damage was also reported in the northern cities of Calama and Arica which lost
electrical power.
The government said a plane loaded with humanitarian aid was scheduled to fly
to the affected area later in the day.
The US Geological Survey said the quake measured 7.7 on the moment magnitude
scale,
which measures the amount of movement on the underground fault and the area of
the fault that ruptured. Many seismologists now use that system rather than the
Richter scale that measures an earthquake size based upon the amount of ground
shaking.
A measurement of seven indicates a major quake and eight a great quake.
Authorities initially warned the quake could cause a tsunami but later lifted
the warning, saying the epicenter was too far from the Pacific coast.
Meanwhile separate earthquakes also hit Argentina and Central America on Wednesday.
An earthquake, which US geologists measured at magnitude 5.3, rocked Guatemala
and neighboring El Salvador, with no reports of casualties.
That quake was not related to the one in Chile, the United States Geological
Survey said.
"There's no link between the ones in Guatemala and Chile other than they're
occurring in the Pacific rim region," John Bellini, a geophysicist at the
USGS, told AFP. "They're not related. Nothing triggered the other or anything
like that."
Story from AFP
14 2306 GMT 11 07
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