7.8 earthquake strikes off New Zealand, spurs small tsunami
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wednesday, July 15th 2009, 9:48 AM
WELLINGTON,New Zealand- A 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck off New Zealand's western coast Wednesday generating a small tsunami. No injuries or major damage were reported.
ThePacific Tsunami Warning CenterinHawaiiwarned that a tsunami was generated, but it later said the waves were less than 8 inches (20 centimeters) in height and the warning was canceled after about an hour.
TheJoint Australian Tsunami Warning Centrealso issued a tsunami alert for easternAustraliathat was still in effect late Wednesday.
"All available New Zealand and international data about the earthquake and sea levels showed that there is no tsunami threat to New Zealand," saidJohn Hamilton, director of theMinistry of Civil Defense and Emergency Management.
The quake's epicenter was 100 miles (161 kilometers) west ofInvercargill, off the west coast of New Zealand's South Island at a depth of 21 miles (33 kilometers), theU.S. Geological Surveysaid.
It hit at 0922 GMT on Wednesday.
The quake was felt widely across South Island. Police in the town of Tuatapere said they had reports of minor cracks in buildings and stock falling from supermarket shelves.
However, no reports of serious damage or injuries were received, police said. Scientists with New Zealand'sInstitute of Geological and Nuclear Scienceswere working with theirU.S.counterparts late Wednesday to reconcile their readings with those taken overseas.
The quake was reported locally at 6.6 magnitude before reports from the U.S. listed it at 7.8 magnitude and as high as 8.2.
"We've had big differences in the measurements of the quake, ranging from 6.6 byGNS Science, to 8.2 by a tsunami warning center in Hawaii. We're issuing a precautionary message,"Vince Cholewa, an emergency management spokesman in Wellington, told the domestic news agency NZPA.
Scientists in New Zealand reported aftershocks, the first of 6.1 magnitude occurring 19 minutes after the main temblor.
New Zealand sits above an area of the Earth's crust where the Pacific and Australian tectonic plates collide and records more than 14,000 earthquakes a year, though only about 150 are felt by residents.
Fewer than 10 temblors a year do any damage
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_world/2009/07/15/2009-07-15_78_quake_strikes_off_nz_small_tsunami_generated.html
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