San Diego Union-Tribune

QUAKES OFF NEW ZEALAND PROMPT EVACUATION­S

- WELLINGTON, New Zealand

A powerful magnitude 8.1 earthquake struck Friday in the ocean off New Zealand, prompting thousands of people to evacuate and triggering tsunami warnings across the South Pacific.

The quake was the largest in a series of temblors that hit the region over several hours, including two earlier quakes that registered magnitude 7.4 and magnitude 7.3.

While the quakes triggered warning systems and caused traffic jams and some chaos in New Zealand as people scrambled to get to higher ground, they did not appear to pose a widespread threat to lives or major infrastruc­ture.

That’s because of the remoteness of where they hit. The largest struck about 620 miles off the coast of New Zealand.

One of the earlier quakes hit much closer to New Zealand and awoke many people during the night as they felt a long, rumbling shaking.

“Hope everyone is ok out there,” New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern wrote on Facebook.

After the largest quake, civil defense authoritie­s in New Zealand told people in certain areas on the East Coast of the North Island that they should move immediatel­y to higher ground and not stay in their homes. They said a damaging tsunami was possible.

The U.S. Tsunami Warning System also cautioned that it could cause tsunami waves of up to 10 feet in Vanuatu and up to 3 feet in Australia, Fiji, French Polynesia and as far away as Mexico and Peru.

The U.S. Geological Survey said it was centered in the remote Kermadec Islands at a depth of 12 miles.

The USGS said the magnitude 7.4 quake was likely a “foreshock” that contribute­d to the larger quake but that the first quake that hit closer to New Zealand was too far away in time and distance to have directly contribute­d.

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