Los Angeles Times

8.1 quake triggers tsunami warnings

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Three temblors off New Zealand send thousands to higher ground amid global alerts.

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — One of the biggest earthquake­s to hit the South Pacific in modern history forced thousands of people in New Zealand to evacuate Friday and triggered tsunami warnings across the world, but it did not appear to cause injuries or major damage because it struck in remote ocean.

The magnitude 8.1 quake was the largest in a series of tremors that hit the region over several hours, including two earlier quakes that registered magnitude 7.4 and magnitude 7.3.

The earthquake­s triggered warning systems and caused traffic jams in New Zealand as people scrambled to get to higher ground, but their remoteness meant they did not pose a widespread threat to lives or infrastruc­ture.

The largest quake struck about 620 miles off the coast of New Zealand. One of the earlier quakes hit much closer to New Zealand and awakened many people with a long, rumbling shaking.

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

After the largest quake, the nation’s civil defense authoritie­s told people in some coastal areas to immediatel­y get to higher ground. They said a damaging tsunami was possible, and waves could reach up to 10 feet.

Emergency Management Minister Kiri Allan told reporters that people had heeded the advisory.

“They felt the long or strong earthquake­s and they knew to grab their bag and head into the highlands,” she said. “I can only thank and acknowledg­e the tireless efforts of the men and women from up and down the coast who knew how to act, when to act and what to do.”

The Pacific Tsunami Warning System also cautioned the quake could cause tsunami waves of up to 10 feet in Vanuatu and up to 3 feet in Australia, Fiji, French Polynesia and as far as Mexico and Peru. Waves of 1 foot were measured by gauges in Vanuatu, New Zealand and islands off Australia.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the strongest quake was centered near the remote Kermadec Islands at a depth of 12 miles. The agency said the quake occurred at the intersecti­on of the Pacific and Australia tectonic plates and eclipsed the region’s previous largest, a magnitude 8.0 in 1976.

Jennifer Eccles, an earthquake expert at the University of Auckland, said the temblor was at the top end of the scale for those involving only the Earth’s ocean crust.

“This is about as big as it gets,” she said.

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