Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau official Lu Pei-ling points
to seismograph readings of a 6.7 magnitude earthquake that shook Taiwan,
Tuesday, Dec. 26, 2006, in Taipei, Taiwan. The quake, with a preliminary
magnitude of between 6.7 and 7.2, was felt throughout Taiwan. It swayed
buildings and knocked objects off the shelves in the capital, Taipei. No
damage or injuries were immediately reported. [AP]
|
TAIPEI, Taiwan -- A powerful earthquake struck off southwestern Taiwan on
Tuesday, triggering a potentially destructive tsunami that was headed toward the
Philippines on the second anniversary of the waves that killed more than 200,000
in southern Asia, seismologists said.
The US Geological Survey said the quake registered magnitude 7.1, while
Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau measured it at 6.7. It was followed eight
minutes later by an aftershock registering 7.0, the USGS said.
Two homes in the southern city of Pingtung collapsed, trapping six people,
ETTV cable news reported. The quake also triggered fires and gas leaks, the
station said.
No deaths were immediately reported.
Japan's Meteorological Bureau said the quake triggered a one-meter (3.3-foot)
-high tsunami that was headed toward the eastern coast of the Philippines.
"There is a possibility of a destructive local tsunami," the bureau said,
saying waves were expected to hit Basco in the Philippines.
"However at some coasts, particularly those near the epicenter, higher
tsunami may arrive," it said. "Authorities should be aware of this possibility."
Philippine police said coastal areas had been alerted.
The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was no threat of a
destructive Pacific-wide tsunami, based on historical earthquake and tsunami
data, but that it would not know for about an hour what the threat might be to
Taiwan or the Philippines.
The quake hit on the second anniversary of a massive earthquake off Indonesia
that triggered a powerful tsunami in the Indian Ocean which killed 230,000
people in a dozen countries.
Tuesday's quake was felt throughout Taiwan. It swayed buildings and knocked
objects off the shelves in the capital, Taipei, in the northern part of the
island.
Phone lines were cut in the southern cities of Kaohsiung and Pingtung,
possibly hindering reports of damage by residents, the CTI Cable News reported.
Several high-rise hotels swayed violently in Kaohsiung, it said.
The tremor was centered at sea about 23 kilometers (13 miles) southwest of
Hengchun on the southern tip of Taiwan, the bureau said. Hengchun is about 450
kilometers (260 miles) south of Taipei.
Tsunamis are caused by seismic activity such as undersea earthquakes,
landslides or volcanoes. Tsunamis are deep, reaching all the way to the
seafloor, so that when they reach land they are forced upward into sometimes
towering walls of water that can inundate coastal areas.