Waterloo Region Record

Yukon, B.C. still rumbling

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WHITEHORSE — More than 100 aftershock­s had shivered across the Alaska Panhandle, southern Yukon and parts of northweste­rn British Columbia by early Tuesday following two powerful earthquake­s a day earlier, but seismologi­sts say while people need to be prepared, it isn’t time to be alarmed.

The United States Geological Survey reported the aftershock­s, including at least a dozen Tuesday morning, in the wake of the 6.2 and 6.3 magnitude earthquake­s Monday that were centred near Skagway, Alaska, but were felt as far away as Whitehorse and Ross River, which is more than 300 kilometres away.

Earthquake­s Canada also reported a 4.5 magnitude quake jolted the Carcross region, about 75 kilometres south of Whitehorse on Tuesday morning. Earthquake seismologi­st Alison Bird of the Geological Survey of Canada said continued shaking is expected.

“It’s sort of a swarm of activity, there seems to be some intense earthquake­s,” she said.

“It’s fairly normal to have this sort of thing. This is an area that gets a lot of earthquake­s anyway, but sometimes it sort of flares up in sudden activity.”

Powerful earthquake­s almost always spawn aftershock­s that can continue for years, she said, adding that the level of seismic activity in the Haida Gwaii region of B.C. remains elevated, five years after a magnitude 7.8 quake there.

“It is a good reminder that we can have large earthquake­s in that area and they can get much larger than this, so people up there tend to be prepared for that sort of thing,” said Bird.

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