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Archive for March 4th, 2010

Strong Quake Strikes Vanuatu – March 4

Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

Strong Earthquake Measuring Up to 6.6Mw Strikes 210 km N of Luganville, Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu

The quake struck at a depth of about 180km on Thursday, March 04, 2010 at 14:02:30 local time.

The mainshock was preceded by a Magnitude 5.0 foreshock.

Location
The epicenter was located at 13.616°S, 167.135°E, USGS said.

Tsunami Status
The hypocenter of this event was located too deep below the ocean floor to cause  a significant tsunami.

10-degree Map Centered at 15°S,165°E


EQ Location Map. Source: USGS/EHP. Image Edited and Enhanced by FEWW.

The quake occurred near 3 volcanoes: Gaua (80km), Suretamatai (40km) and Motlav (60km).

Gaua has been active sporadically since September 2009.

According to Global Volcanism Program website

On 29 January, the Vanuatu Geohazards Observatory reported significant changes in Gaua’s activity over the previous two weeks. They noted that since 16 January more gas was emitted and multiple explosions produced denser and darker ash plumes. During 22-29 January, the water level in the river to the E that Lake Letas feeds rose 10 cm. Gas-and-ash plumes rose 3 km and drifted S and W. On 24 January nearby villagers reported seeing ejected material from Strombolian activity. The Wellington VAAC reported that on 27 January an ash cloud was seen on satellite imagery. Strong explosions were seen and heard from East Gaua on 29 January. According to the VAAC, the Vanuatu Geohazards Observatory reported that gas-and-ash plumes rose to altitudes of 3 km (10,000 ft) a.s.l. and drifted S and W that same day.

Fire-Earth Moderators believe Gaua could resume activity in the coming days.

Related Links:

      Posted in 32421912, earthquake, Gaua, Motlav, Suretamatai, volcanism | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

      Chile: astronaut photo of Concepción and Hualpén

      Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

      Smoke Plumes over Concepcion, Chile, 7 Hrs After the megaquake


      download large image
      (662 KB, JPEG)                                                            acquired Feb 27

      This detailed astronaut photograph of the Chilean cities of Concepción and Hualpén was acquired from the International Space Station approximately seven hours after a magnitude 8.8 earthquake occurred offshore 115 kilometers (71 miles) to the north-northeast. Much of the Chilean coastline is located above the boundary between the converging Nazca and South American tectonic plates. This type of plate boundary is known as a subduction zone. Such zones frequently experience moderate to strong earthquakes as one tectonic plate overrides the other. The largest earthquake worldwide during the past 200 years (magnitude 9.5 in May 1960) had a source region approximately 230 kilometers (140 miles) north of the February 27 quake.

      While the image is not detailed enough to see damage to individual buildings or roadways, some indicators of earthquake damage are visible, especially in the large version of the image. A dark smoke plume is visible at image lower left near an oil refinery in Hualpén. At image lower right, parts of the road bed of a single-lane bridge over the Río Biobío appear to have collapsed. A smaller, white smoke plume is visible at image right near the Universidad de Concepción. Smoke, probably related to the earthquake, was observed over Santiago in images acquired by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on NASA’s Terra satellite less than one hour after this astronaut photograph was taken.

      Astronaut photograph ISS022-E-74881 was acquired on February 27, 2010, with a Nikon D2Xs digital camera fitted with an 800mm lens, and is provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations experiment and Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space Center. The image was taken by the Expedition 22 crew. The image in this article has been cropped and enhanced to improve contrast. Lens artifacts have been removed. The International Space Station Program supports the laboratory as part of the ISS National Lab to help astronauts take pictures of Earth that will be of the greatest value to scientists and the public, and to make those images freely available on the Internet. Additional images taken by astronauts and cosmonauts can be viewed at the NASA/JSC Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. Caption by William L. Stefanov, NASA-JSC.

      Related Links

      Posted in 32412144, chile earthquake, Concepción, Hualpén, ISS Chile Photo | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

      U.S. Weather Forecast March 4, 2010

      Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

      Rain, Snow with 90 percent Probability of Coastal Flooding

      Tides and onshore winds will cause flooding of low areas along the shore

      US weather forecast Map  (Still Image) – Click images to enlarge.

      US weather Forecast Map (regularly updated)
      .

      US weather Hazards Map at 13:11UTC March 4, 2010

      BELOW: Current Hazard Map.

      SEE Forecasts below:

      Hazardous marine condition(s):
      Gale Warning

      ANZ094-041500-
      BALTIMORE CANYON TO HAGUE LINE S OF 1000 FM
      400 AM EST THU MAR 4 2010

      TODAY
      N TO NW WINDS 30 TO 40 KT DIMINISHING TO 25 TO 35 KT.
      SEAS 13 TO 21 FT SUBSIDING TO 10 TO 18 FT. WINDS AND SEAS
      BECOMING HIGHEST E. SCATTERED SHOWERS. ISOLATED TSTMS E OF 68W
      EARLY.

      TONIGHT
      N TO NW WINDS 25 TO 35 KT EARLY…DIMINISHING TO 20
      TO 30 KT LATE. SEAS SUBSIDING TO 9 TO 15 FT. HIGHEST WINDS AND
      SEAS E. ISOLATED SHOWERS.

      FRI AND FRI NIGHT
      N TO NW WINDS 20 TO 25 KT. SEAS 9 TO 15
      FT…HIGHEST E. ISOLATED SHOWERS.

      SAT
      N TO NW WINDS DIMINISHING TO 15 TO 20 KT. SEAS SUBSIDING
      TO 6 TO 10 FT LATE…HIGHEST SE.

      SUN
      NW WINDS DIMINISHING TO 10 TO 15 KT. SEAS SUBSIDING TO 3
      TO 6 FT LATE…HIGHEST SE.

      MON
      SW WINDS 10 TO 15 KT EARLY…INCREASING TO W 15 TO 25 KT
      LATE. SEAS 3 TO 5 FT BUILDING TO 4 TO 7 FT LATE.
      $$

      ###

      SEAS GIVEN AS SIGNIFICANT WAVE HEIGHT…WHICH IS THE AVERAGE
      HEIGHT OF THE HIGHEST 1/3 OF THE WAVES. INDIVIDUAL WAVES MAY BE
      MORE THAN TWICE THE SIGNIFICANT WAVE HEIGHT.

      AMZ080-041530-
      SW N ATLANTIC S OF 31N W OF 65W INCLUDING BAHAMAS
      430 AM EST THU MAR 04 2010

      GALE WARNING N OF 27N E OF 71W

      TODAY
      N OF 27N E OF 71W W WINDS 25 TO 35 KT. SEAS 14 TO 20 FT
      IN NW SWELL. ELSEWHERE N OF 25N E OF BAHAMAS W TO NW WINDS 20 TO
      30 KT. SEAS 8 TO 16 FT IN NW SWELL. W OF BAHAMAS NW WINDS 15 TO
      20 KT. SEAS 4 TO 6 FT…EXCEPT 5 TO 8 FT IN STRAITS OF FL.
      ELSEWHERE W OF FRONT W TO NW WINDS 15 TO 20 KT. SEAS 8 TO 14 FT
      IN NW SWELL. E OF FRONT SW WINDS 10 TO 15 KT. SEAS 4 TO 7 FT.
      SCATTERED SHOWERS FAR SE WATERS.

      TONIGHT
      N OF 26N E OF 78W NE OF BAHAMAS W TO NW WINDS 20 TO
      30 KT. SEAS 8 TO 16 FT IN NW SWELL. S OF 23N NW TO N WINDS 10 TO
      15 KT. SEAS 7 TO 9 FT E OF BAHAMAS AND 3 TO 5 FT W OF BAHAMAS.
      ELSEWHERE W OF BAHAMAS NW TO N WINDS 15 TO 20 KT. SEAS 3 TO 5
      FT. FROM 23N TO 26N NW WINDS 15 TO 20 KT. SEAS 8 TO 11 FT IN NW
      SWELL. N OF BAHAMAS W OF 78W NW TO N WINDS 15 TO 20 KT. SEAS 5
      TO 7 FT. SCATTERED SHOWERS FAR SE WATERS.

      FRI AND FRI NIGHT
      N OF 27N AND FROM 25N TO 27N E OF 73W NW
      WINDS 15 TO 20 KT. SEAS 8 TO 14 FT IN NW SWELL…EXCEPT 5 TO 8
      FT W OF 78W. W OF BAHAMAS NW TO N WINDS 10 TO 15 KT. SEAS 2 TO 4
      FT. ELSEWHERE W OF FRONT NW TO N WINDS 10 TO 15 KT. SEAS 7 TO 10
      FT IN NW SWELL. E OF FRONT SW WINDS 5 TO 10 KT. SEAS 6 TO 8 FT.
      SCATTERED SHOWERS FAR SE WATERS.

      SAT
      W OF BAHAMAS N WINDS 15 KT. SEAS 2 TO 4 FT. ELSEWHERE NW
      TO N WINDS 15 TO 20 KT. SEAS 7 TO 10 FT IN N SWELL…EXCEPT 5 TO
      7 FT W OF 78W.

      SUN
      W OF BAHAMAS N TO NE WINDS 10 TO 15 KT. SEAS 3 TO 5 FT IN
      N SWELL. ELSEWHERE N WINDS 10 TO 15 KT…EXCEPT BECOMING N TO NE
      WINDS 15 TO 20 KT S OF 22N SUN NIGHT. SEAS 7 TO 10 FT IN N
      SWELL…EXCEPT 5 TO 7 FT W OF 78W.

      MON
      N OF 28N W TO NW WINDS 5 TO 10 FT. SEAS 5 TO 7 FT. W OF
      BAHAMAS E WINDS 10 KT. SEAS 2 TO 4 FT. ELSEWHERE NE WINDS 5 TO
      10 KT. SEAS 6 TO 8 FT IN N SWELL.

      Related Links

      Posted in U.S. rain, US flood, US snow, weather forecast, weather-related Disasters | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

      IF Nature Had a List of Extreme Dislikes

      Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

      Submitted by a reader with additional information added by FEWW

      AND She Probably Does …

      Don’t Pollute the Sea, Your Life Depends on Water

      Cars, Air Travel, Power Plants, Oil Rigs, Coalmines, War, Military Hardware, Large-Scale Human Movement, Tourism, Trade Shows, Global Tournaments, Oil Spills, Plastic Garbage, GHG  …  and Cruise Ships Would Probably Top Her List of Loathsome Activities by Humans


      Louis Majesty is a Maltese-flagged, Greek Cypriot-owned cruise ship. Image via AFP. Image may be subject to copyright. See FEWW Fair Use Notice.

      Three giant 8.5-meter (26ft) high waves bashed against a cruise ship in the Mediterranean, as if trying to rip it apart, killing two people and injuring  six others.

      The Cypriot-owned Louis Majesty was sailing off the north-east coast of Spain when the “abnormally high” waves attacked, breaking ship windows,  shipowners were reported as saying.

      “A wave broke the glass in the area of the saloon and water was taken on board,” a spokesman for the Spanish coast guard confirmed.

      The dead weer identified as a German and an Italian male, both in their fifties.  There were 1,350 passengers and 580 crew onboard.

      The Louis Majesty was on a 12-day Mediterranean cruise headed toward Genoa, Italy, but has since returned to Barcelona, Spain.

      “Louis Cruises extends its sincere condolences to the families of the two victims and its full support to the injured passengers while expressing its deep sorrow for the incident,” a company spokesman said.

      Winds of more than 100km per hour (60 mph) in the area may have been responsible for the incident a French Navy official was reported as saying.

      Do you feel as if nature has put you on notice?

      Related Links:

      Posted in cruise ships, eco tourism, eco-terrorism, Mediterranean cruise, oceans are dying | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

      Chile: Two Strong Aftershocks in 8 Hrs

      Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

      Two strong aftershocks measuring up to magnitude 6.2 and 6.3 strike Bio-Bio and Valparaiso, Chile

      The first thing that ought to have come to mind is, thank goodness Chile doesn’t have a nuclear power plant or large scale nuclear waste storage facility. [The country’s two open-pool research reactors (5MWt and 10MWt) are apparently located near Santiago.]

      What if megaquakes struck close to a large nuclear power plant, or two?

      Earthquake Details

      • Magnitude: 6.1 [Max magnitude estimated by Fire-Earth: 6.3 Mw]
      • Date-Time:
        • Thursday, March 04, 2010 at 01:59:50 UTC
        • Wednesday, March 03, 2010 at 10:59:50 PM at epicenter
      • Location: 33.154°S, 72.064°W
      • Depth: 34.4 km (21.4 miles)
      • Region: OFFSHORE VALPARAISO, CHILE
      • Distances:
        • 45 km (30 miles) WSW of Valparaiso, Chile
        • 135 km (85 miles) WNW of SANTIAGO, Chile
        • 165 km (105 miles) NW of Rancagua, Chile
        • 190 km (115 miles) SSW of Illapel, Chile
      • Location Uncertainty: horizontal +/- 24.6 km (15.3 miles); depth +/- 4.3 km (2.7 miles)
      • Source: USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
      • Event ID:  us2010tkan

      10-degree Map Centered at 35°S,70°W


      The two strong aftershocks detailed here are marked in RED on the EQ Location Map. Source: USGS/EHP. Image Edited and Enhanced by FEWW.

      Earthquake Details

      • Magnitude: 6.0  [Max magnitude estimated by Fire-Earth: 6.2 Mw]
      • Date-Time:
        • Wednesday, March 03, 2010 at 17:44:25 UTC
        • Wednesday, March 03, 2010 at 02:44:25 PM at epicenter
      • Location: 36.452°S, 73.069°W
      • Depth: 19 km (11.8 miles) set by location program
      • Region:  OFFSHORE BIO-BIO, CHILE
      • Distances:
        • 40 km (25 miles) N of Concepcion, Chile
        • 85 km (55 miles) W of Chillan, Chile
        • 130 km (80 miles) NNW of Los Angeles, Chile
        • 400 km (250 miles) SSW of SANTIAGO, Chile
      • Source:  USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
      • Event ID us2010tjbk

      Tsunami Status

      Pacific Ocean Tsunami Warning Center said there were NO Tsunami Warning, Watch  or Advisory in effect.

      Related Links:

      Posted in BIO-BIO, Chile Earthquake update, Chile Quake, Chile Quake aftershock, Quake Aftermath, Valparaiso | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

      What in the Ocean Are Hydrothermal Vents?

      Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

      Press Resources | Latest News
      The Earth Institute/ Columbia University

      Scientists Locate Apparent Hydrothermal Vents off Antarctica

      Discovery, a First, Could Spur Exploration of Distant Mid-Ocean Ridge

      Scientists at Columbia’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory have found evidence of hydrothermal vents on the seafloor near Antarctica, formerly a blank spot on the map for researchers wanting to learn more about seafloor formation and the bizarre life forms drawn to these extreme environments.

      Hydrothermal vents spew volcanically heated seawater from the planet’s underwater mountain ranges—the vast mid-ocean ridge system, where lava erupts and new crust forms. Chemicals dissolved in those vents influence ocean chemistry and sustain a complex web of organisms, much as sunlight does on land. In recent decades more than 220 vents have been discovered worldwide, but so far no one has looked for them in the rough and frigid waters off Antarctica.

      A vent spews chemical fluids from the East Pacific Rise, about 5,600 miles from newly suspected vents on the Pacific Antarctic Ridge.
      Credit: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.


      From her lab in Palisades, N.Y., geochemist Gisela Winckler recently took up the search. By analyzing thousands of oceanographic measurements, she and her Lamont colleagues pinpointed six spots on the remote Pacific Antarctic Ridge, about 2,000 miles from New Zealand, the closest inhabited country, and 1,000 miles from the west coast of Antarctica, where they think vents are likely to be found. The sites are described in a paper published THIS WEEK in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

      “Most of the deep ocean is like a desert, but these vents are oases of life and weirdness,” said Winckler. “The Pacific Antarctic ridge is one of the ridges we know least about. It would be fantastic if researchers were to dive to the seafloor to study the vents we believe are there.”

      Two important facts helped the scientists isolate the hidden vents. First, the ocean is stratified with layers of lighter water sitting on top of layers of denser water. Second, when a seafloor vent erupts, it spews gases rich in rare helium-3, an isotope found in earth’s mantle and in the magma bubbling below the vent. As helium-3 disperses through the ocean, it mixes into a density layer and stays there, forming a plume that can stretch over thousands of kilometers.

      The Lamont scientists were analyzing ocean-helium measurements to study how the deep ocean exchanges dissolved gases with the atmosphere when they came across a helium plume that looked out of place. It was in a southern portion of the Pacific Ocean, below a large and well-known helium plume coming off the East Pacific Rise, one of the best-studied vent regions on earth. But this mystery plume appeared too deep to have the same source.

      Suspecting that it was coming from the Pacific Antarctic Ridge instead, the researchers compiled a detailed map of ocean-density layers in that region, using some 25,000 salinity, temperature and depth measurements. After locating the helium plume along a single density layer, they compared the layer to topographic maps of the Pacific Antarctic Ridge to figure out where the plume would intersect.

      The Pacific Antarctic Ridge may be the least-studied of the underwater volcanic mountains that crisscross the globe. Blue square indicates suspected vents.
      Credit: Modified image from Chris German and Karen Von Damm.

      The sites they identified cover 340 miles of ridge line–the approximate distance between Manhattan and Richmond, Va.–or about 7 percent of the total 4,300 mile-ridge. This chain of volcanic mountains lies about three miles below the ocean surface, and its mile-high peaks are cut by steep canyons and fracture zones created as the sea floor spreads apart. It is a cold and lonely stretch of ocean, far from land or commercial shipping lanes.

      “They haven’t found vents, but they’ve narrowed the places to look by quite a bit,” said Edward Baker, a vent expert at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

      Of course, finding vents in polar waters is not easy, even with a rough idea where to look. In 2007, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution geophysicist Rob Reves-Sohn led a team of scientists to the Gakkel Ridge between Greenland and Siberia to look for vents detected six years earlier. Although they discovered regions where warm fluids appeared to be seeping from the seafloor, they failed to find the high-temperature, black smoker vents they had come for.  In a pending paper, Sohn now says he has narrowed down the search to a 400-kilometer-square area where he expects to find seven new vents, including at least one black smoker.

      The search for vents off Antarctica may be equally unpredictable, but the map produced by the Lamont scientists should greatly improve the odds of success, said Robert Newton, a Lamont oceanographer and study co-author. “You don’t have to land right on top of a vent to know it’s there,” he said. “You get a rich mineral soup coming out of these smokers—methane, iron, manganese, sulfur and many other minerals. Once you get within a few tens of kilometers, you can detect these other tracers.”

      Since the discovery of the first hydrothermal vents in the late 1970s, scientists have searched for far-flung sites, in the hunt for new species and adaptive patterns that can shed light on how species evolved in different spots. Cindy Van Dover, a deep sea biologist and director of the Duke University Marine Laboratory, says she expects that new species will be found on the Pacific Antarctic Ridge, and that this region may hold important clues about how creatures vary between the Indian and Pacific Oceans, on either end.

      “These vents are living laboratories,” said Van Dover, who was not involved in the study. “When we went to the Indian Ocean, we discovered the scaly-foot gastropod, a deep-sea snail whose foot is covered in armor made of iron sulfides. The military may be interested in studying the snail to develop a better armor. The adaptations found in these animals may have many other applications.”

      Other study authors include Peter Schlosser, head of Lamont’s Environmental Tracer Group and Lamont marine geologist Timothy Crone.

      Posted in Antarctica, East Pacific Rise, Gakkel Ridge, geochemistry, Pacific Antarctic Ridge, underwater mountain ranges | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

      Strong Quake Strikes Taiwan – March 4

      Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

      Strong Earthquake Measuring up to 6.6Mw Strikes Taiwan

      The quake struck about 250 km (155 miles) SSW of T’AI-PEI, Taiwan

      The quake was in line with Fire Earth February 28 Earthquake Forecast for Taiwan. Large/larger quakes in the region are highly probable anytime.

      [UPDATED @ 10:30UTC]
      12 people have been injured in a fire triggered by the Taiwan earthquake, AP reported the
      National Fire Agency as saying.


      Firemen battle a blaze at a textile factory that started shortly after a strong earthquake jolted the island, Thursday, March 4, 2010, in the southern area of Tainan, Taiwan. A powerful 6.4-magnitude earthquake rocked southern Taiwan on Thursday morning, causing widespread damage, and disrupting communications around the island. (AP Photo). Image may be subject to copyright. More AP photos.

      The mainshock, which was felt throughout Taiwan, including in Taipei, some 250km to the north, and Kaohsiung (65km to the south), made  tall buildings  sway for about a minute. It was followed by at least two aftershocks the largest of which was a M4.8 event.

      According to Taiwan’s CWB, the mainshock struck at a depth of 5km in a mountainous region 43km NE of Pingtung city (23.00N, 120.73E).

      Power was cut off near the epicenter close to Jiashan Township, Kaohsiung, Taiwan’s Ministry of Interior and the National Fire Agency reported.

      According to other reports,  a number of residents in southern Taiwan were trapped in elevators. There are also reports of several fires that broke out as a result of the quake. At least one injury of causes unknown was reported. Taiwan’s  Highspeed Railway was temporarily disrupted in several locations, Taiwanese media reported.

      Tsunami Alert:

      NO tsunami alert has been issued. The quake occurred far enough from the coast to pose a tsunami threat.

      10-degree Map Centered at 25°N,120°E

      EQ Location Map. Source: USGS/EHP. Image Edited and Enhanced by FEWW.

      Earthquake Details

      • Magnitude reported by USGS: 6.4   [Max magnitude estimated by Fire-Earth: 6.1Mw]
      • Date-Time:
        • Thursday, March 04, 2010 at 00:18:52 UTC
        • Thursday, March 04, 2010 at 08:18:52 AM at epicenter
      • Location: 22.903°N, 120.823°E
      • Depth: 23.1 km (14.4 miles)
      • Region: TAIWAN
      • Distances:
        • 40 km (25 miles) WNW of T’ai-tung, Taiwan
        • 60 km (40 miles) ESE of T’ai-nan, Taiwan
        • 65 km (40 miles) ENE of Kao-hsiung, Taiwan
        • 250 km (155 miles) SSW of T’AI-PEI, Taiwan
      • Location Uncertainty: horizontal +/- 4.6 km (2.9 miles); depth +/- 6.2 km (3.9 miles)
      • Source: USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
      • USGS Event ID: us2010tkab

      A 7.6Mw quake which struck central Taiwan north of SinYi township (23.77N 120.98E) in 1999 killed an estimated 2,400 people.

      Historic Taiwan Earthquakes – Map


      Large Historic Earthquakes in and around Taiwan. Source: University of Hiroshima, Japan.

      Historic Taiwan Earthquakes – Details

      Related Links:

        Posted in earthquake, feww earthquake forecast, Pingtung quake, south taiwan quake, Taiwan quake | Tagged: , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

        Chile Quake Aftermath: Day 5

        Posted by feww on March 4, 2010

        There would be enough food and fuel for everyone, if they wait long enough: President Bachelet

        Death Toll from the quake and tsunami is slowly inching up above 800, but the number of missing is grossly underestimated.

        “There is enough food and therefore we must remain calm. There is also enough fuel, there is no risk of shortages … Be confident … Chile is going to stand on its feet again,” the outgoing president Bachelet blurted out on the nationally TV and radio.

        Ms. Bachelet, described as  center-left, has again pleaded with Chileans  not only to stop looting, but cease hoarding supplies, too.

        She doesn’t accept that her government’s response to one of the world’s largest earthquake was even more pathetic than the dysfunctional “government” of Haiti to their earthquake disaster in January.

        Ms Bachelet has urged Chilean’s to help with relief efforts, like every good citizen should. But even Gen Pinochet knew an army cannot march on an empty stomach.

        Enter the EXTREME Right

        If her government was really center-left, may good have mercy on Chileans because the ultra conservative president-elect, billionaire businessman Sebastian Pinera, can only be described as EXTREME right. To people like him, people are mere numbers on a balance sheet and the bottom line must always be black. Chile may be reentering the “dark ages” again.

        More Aftershocks

        Concepcion, Chile’s second largest and the closest major city to the epicenter of the M8.8 megaquake that struck on Saturday, was shaken by a swarm of strong aftershocks which  sent the locals scurrying to higher grounds fearing a new wave of tsunamis.

        The capital Santiago was also shaken by at least two strong aftershocks on Wednesday.


        Earthquake location map (10-degree Map Centered at 35°S,70°W) shows the approximate location of the M8.8 megaquake and 195 aftershock, many larger than M5.0 as 01:00UTC (GMT) on March 4, 2010.  Source: USGS/EHP.

        Dead and Missing

        The number of dead was reported as 813 by late Wednesday, but there are probably as many as 1,000 people still unaccounted for especially in the coastal villages that were completely obliterated by the three large tsunami waves (which the government had said won’t happen).

        As many as 500 people are unaccounted for in Constitucion, one of several fishing  villages which were almost entirely wiped out.

        Curfew

        Concepcion is currently under an 18-hour curfew enforced by as many as 17,000 troops (3,000 more than the number reported by the media) as well as the local police force. But with so many buildings destroyed or damaged, and residents  refusing to enter their homes in case of a collapse, this curfew must be a very strange one.

        Basic Necessities at  Extortionate Prices

        A few shops have opened in Concepcion, but foodstuffs are sold at extortionate price, inflated by 300 percent.

        Related Links:

        Posted in Chile Quake, chile quake aftermath, chile quake dead, earthquake, Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »