7.5-magnitude quake hits Papua New Guinea; tsunami feared | Inquirer News

7.5-magnitude quake hits Papua New Guinea; tsunami feared

/ 11:04 AM May 05, 2015

papua-new-guinea-mapSYDNEY, Australia — A 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck off Papua New Guinea on Tuesday with hazardous tsunami waves possible along the local coast, seismologists said.

The quake struck 133 kilometers (83 miles) south-southwest of the town of Kokopo in the New Britain region at a depth of 63 kilometers, the US Geological Survey said, and was followed by a 5.9 magnitude aftershock.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said “hazardous tsunami waves are possible for coasts located within 300 kilometers of the earthquake epicenter”.

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“Certainly there’s a potential for a local tsunami in the area,” Geoscience Australia senior seismologist Jonathan Bathgate told AFP, but it would not impact on neighboring Australia or New Zealand.

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Last week, a 6.8 earthquake hit off Kokopo, with a population of 20,000, after a 6.7 tremor struck off the same area on Thursday. There was no reported damage.

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Bathgate said the region had been very active over the past few months, noting that a 7.7 magnitude earthquake occurred on March 30, generating a local tsunami.

Again, there was no major damage reported after that quake, which took place in a mostly uninhabited region off the island of New Britain.

“We don’t anticipate a particularly disastrous impact,” geophysicist at the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center Barry Hirshorn told Sky News of Tuesday’s quake.

Hirshorn said the best estimate based on initial readings was a wave of about “a metre or so”.

“We can’t predict earthquakes but this area is in a very active sequence. This could be the biggest earthquake that’s been building up over the last few months, but there could be another larger earthquake,” Bathgate added.

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“We now could endure a series of aftershocks… but it doesn’t rule out the potential for a larger earthquake.”

New Britain, the largest island of the Bismarck Archipelago, is east of mainland New Guinea and has a population of around 500,000 people.

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The island lies on the 4,000-kilometre-long Pacific Australia plate, which forms part of the “Ring of Fire”, a hotspot for seismic activity due to friction between tectonic plates.

TAGS: Earthquake, Tsunami

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