Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

New Zealand lifts tsunami alert

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand — One of the strongest earthquake­s to hit the South Pacific in modern history triggered tsunami warnings across the ocean and forced thousands of people in New Zealand to evacuate coastal areas Friday. Small tsunami waves were seen, but little damage was apparent hours later.

The magnitude 8.1 quake in the Kermadec Islands region about 620 miles from New Zealand was the largest in a series of tremors over several hours, including two earlier quakes that registered magnitude 7.4 and magnitude 7.3.

The tsunami threat caused traffic jams and some chaos in New Zealand as people scrambled to get to higher ground.

Residents recorded videos of small wave surges in some places, including at Tokomaru Bay near Gisborne. In the afternoon, the National Emergency Management Agency said the threat had passed and people could return to their homes, although they should continue avoiding beaches.

One of the earlier quakes hit much closer to New Zealand and awoke many people as they felt 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, civil defense authoritie­s in New Zealand 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 followed 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 Center cautioned the quake could cause tsunami waves of up to 10 feet in Vanuatu and up to 3 feet in Fiji, French Polynesia and as far away as Mexico and Peru.

Waves of 1 foot were measured by ocean 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 said in a agency report that the quake occurred at the intersecti­on of the Pacific and Australia tectonic plates and eclipsed the largest quake previously recorded in the region, a magnitude 8.0 in 1976. It said the interactio­n between the plates creates one of the most seismicall­y active regions in the world, and it has recorded 215 quakes there above magnitude 6.0 over the past century.

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

She said most quakes larger than magnitude 8.0 tend to occur when a section of more robust continenta­l crust is involved.

The U. S. Geological Survey 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.

The first quake was centered at a depth of 13 miles under the ocean about 108 miles northeast of the city of Gisborne.

It was widely felt in New Zealand, and residents in the major cities of Auckland, Wellington and Christchur­ch reported being shaken awake.

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