2 Dead, Hundreds Hurt In Chile Quake
Magnitude-7.7 Quake Also Damaged Thousands Of Homes
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A major earthquake rocked a large area of northern Chile, and it was felt in the capital of Santiago. (CBS)
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Interactive Ground Shakers Learn about what triggers an earthquake and get details on some of the world's worst.
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Fast Facts Chile Learn about the people, economy and history.
The quake, which struck at 12:40 p.m., shook the Chilean capital 780 miles to the south of the epicenter, and was felt as far away as the other side of the continent in Sao Paulo, Brazil, 1,400 miles to the east.
The U.S. Geological Survey calculated the magnitude at 7.7. It was followed by several aftershocks, including three larger than magnitude 5. The University of Chile's Seismological Institute put the epicenter near Quillagua, a tiny desert village in the foothills of the Andes mountains.
“It was incredible. I thought my last day had come when I saw the mountain shaking under a large cloud of dust,” Maria Ines Palete, a Quillagua resident told the state television.
Two women were killed in the town of Tocopilla, 25 miles from the epicenter, when their houses collapsed, authorities said. Hospital director Juan Urrutia said at least 100 people were treated there for injuries or panic.
Hardest hit were the cities of Tocopilla and Maria Elena.
In Tocopilla, 100 houses were destroyed and another 2,500, or 40 percent of the city's total, were damaged, said presidential spokesman Ricardo Lagos Weber. Two sections of Tocopilla were evacuated and two schools were being used as shelters for those left homeless by the quake.
Chile's government said it was flying 500 emergency housing units to Tocopilla and that they should be installed by Thursday morning.
Lagos Weber said 1,200 homes were damaged in Maria Elena or 70 percent of the city's total and residents were still without running water, electricity and telephone service.
“I was at work and came home after the quake to find that I no longer have a house,” said Julio Lopez, a Maria Elena resident.
At the badly damaged Lautaro restaurant in Maria Elena, a dozen men drank beer by candlelight.
“What else can I do? I lost everything. So I'll just have a few drinks,” said Samuel Araya, a 57-year-old miner in this town of 7,000 people, which was once a nitrate mining center.
Residents gathered in the darkened main plaza to discuss the earthquake.
Blanca Pizarro said she took refuge under her kitchen table when the quake struck and seconds later the roof collapsed on the table.
“I'm alive by a miracle,” she said.
Chile's largest copper mines are in the quake area and production was halted as electric power was cut for several hours. But Codelco, which operates some of the largest mines, said the situation was back to normal by the end of the day. Chile is the world's largest copper producer.
About 10 road workers were trapped near Tocopilla when a section of a tunnel they were repairing collapsed, but all were in good condition and rescuers were working to free them, according to the government's emergency bureau.
In the port city of Antofagasta, 105 miles south of the epicenter, police Capt. Javier Carmona said at least 45 people were injured.
But reports were incomplete as government ministers boarded flights to the area. President Michelle Bachelet was expected to fly to northern Chile on Thursday.
The U.S. Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued, then canceled, a tsunami warning for Chile and Peru. It said the quake generated only a two-foot wave.
Scientists were trying to determine why such an intense quake apparently did not cause more damage.
“The ground in the region is very good, very firm, so the movement's effect on buildings is limited,” said Sergio Barrientos, a seismologist at the University of Chile.
“It comes down to the level of shaking in certain places,” said Paul Earle at the USGS. “It's not immensely populated in the areas most affected.”
The quake occurred in one of the most seismically active regions in the world, where the Nazca tectonic plate is shoving itself beneath the South American plate.
A 1939 quake in Chile killed 28,000 people and in 1960, a magnitude-9.5 quake the strongest recorded in the 20th century killed 5,700 people. On June 13, 2005, a magnitude-7.8 quake near Tarapaca in northern Chile killed 11 people and left thousands homeless.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- "Authorities reported some injuries but no deaths from the quake"
Its safe to say Bush wasn''''t involved.
If he had been...there certainly would have been death :P
Posted by jh6379 at 03:36 PM : Nov 14, 2007
VOMIT - Reply to this comment
- I bet President Bush gets blamed for this somehow!!!!
Posted by anicelady at 02:46 PM : Nov 14, 2007
His movement of massive amounts of ordinance (and money) from one side of the Earth to then other is the reason. Howzzaaat???
Posted by ToolMangler at 07:56 PM : Nov 14, 2007
Just Hillary jogging - Reply to this comment
- I bet President Bush gets blamed for this somehow!!!!
Posted by anicelady at 02:46 PM
I bet another whack job like you will make a similar statement. Good grief. - Reply to this comment
- Ok all take time.. get off your PC''s once in awhile it is called the ring of fire.
- Reply to this comment
- I bet President Bush gets blamed for this somehow!!!!
Posted by anicelady at 02:46 PM : Nov 14, 2007
His movement of massive amounts of ordinance (and money) from one side of the Earth to then other is the reason. Howzzaaat??? - Reply to this comment
- this is a reminder that there are things that resides above our human egos. To remind us that we are not really in control but an insignificant player in someone''s game
- Reply to this comment
- Well I was hopeing it would be centered right under the White House, something needs to Shake those Idiots up in Washington, They''''re asleep !
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Posted by JetRanger7 at 01:41 PM : Nov 14, 2007
+ report abuse
the liberal barrel of bullsh*t had runneth over with this one - Reply to this comment
- "Authorities reported some injuries but no deaths from the quake"
Its safe to say Bush wasn''''t involved.
If he had been...there certainly would have been death :P
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Posted by jh6379 at 03:36 PM : Nov 14, 2007
+ report abuse
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this liberal barrel we call "a crock full of childish rants, hellucinations and bullsh*t'' is getting full.. i guess one more cant hurt.. - Reply to this comment
- In the midst of this earthquake ....I hate to seem trivial.....so far removed from it all.....and everything else ...really........but if thats how it really went ....doesn''t the writer of the piece have to try to ask a few more questions in the piece...can we have attention to detail please.....which is it ....and what other facts went unquestioned .....and go unquestioned in EVERY PIECE?
The USGS said the earthquake occurred about 37.3 miles underground - """relatively deep""" - which diminishes the destructive capability of quakes.
followed by
John Bellini, a USGS geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colorado, said the earthquake''s epicenter was """relatively shallow,""" 38 miles down. He said it could have caused greater damage to a more populated and developed area. - Reply to this comment
- In the midst of this earthquake ....I hate to seem trivial.....so far removed from it all.....and everything else ...really........but if thats how it really went ....doesn''t the writer of the piece have to try to ask a few more questions in the piece...can we have attention to detail please.....which is it ....and what other facts went unquestioned .....and go unquestioned in EVERY PIECE?
The USGS said the earthquake occurred about 37.3 miles underground - """relatively deep""" - which diminishes the destructive capability of quakes.
followed by
John Bellini, a USGS geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colorado, said the earthquake''s epicenter was """relatively shallow,""" 38 miles down. He said it could have caused greater damage to a more populated and developed area. - Reply to this comment




