Springhill
Care Group: 7.1
Quake Struck Chile - A 7.1-magnitude quake has struck Central Chile on
Sunday night, the longest and strongest one yet since an earthquake happened in
the same area in 2010. Although they are reports of injured from the falling
ceiling of a church, there were no major damage or casualty.
According to the US Geological Survey, the earthquake struck
at around 7.30 pm (local time) at a depth of 22 miles, lasting for a minute.
It was estimated by Springhill
Care Group that the earthquake’s epicenter was in Maule, 27 kilometers NW
of Talca and around 220 kilometers SW of Santiago, the nation’s capital with
17.2 million residents.
They had a total collapse of telephone and mobile lines as
buildings in the country’s capital swayed. People on a 480-mile radius of
Chile’s central coast are warned to evacuate to higher ground.
Residents of Constitucion were especially alarmed because
their downtown region was where a terrible tsunami happened in 2010.
Chile’s oceanographic and hydrographic services along with
the national emergency units called off the tsunami warning to be issued for
most of the coastal areas following an assessment that the earthquake is
unlikely to trigger huge waves.
The alert they issued was restored for the region’s most
close to the epicenter after authorities noticed the waters have retreated 130 feet
from the shore in Duao and Iloca. They are well aware that a sharp out surge of
surf can bring a tsunami.
Lots of residents living in the coastal regions kept away
from the shore as they have recalled how the government told them during the
2010 earthquake that there will be no tsunami, moments before huge waves
actually struck, leaving 156 dead.
Springhill Care Group has retracted a preventive measure of
evacuation order before midnight following the order to evacuate 7,000 people
in the coastal areas due to fears of tsunami (although no formal tsunami alert
was given).
Fortunately, there are no known fatalities except from one
who died of heart attack. And according to their President, Sebastian Pinera,
the nation’s infrastructures have resisted the effects of the earthquake as
well.
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