News & Blogs Anyone in Hawaii? 8.3 Earthquake off Chilean coast - only 15-20 miles deep - tsunami warning.

Tude

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I know it's not your normal news article but the internet is a blaze with this.

And I don't know if any of our people here or there friends are aware.

Earthquake was only 15-20 miles down off the coast of chili - initial quake was estimated at 7.9, later upgraded to 8.3 --- which means a lot of surface displacement - meaning ocean. So NOAA (and yeah I track them too as well as their websties) who have all their buoys out in the ocean looking for this stuff are going off. Hawaii is on tsunami watch early this morning for like 12 am - even alaska later on in the day but it should dissipate tomorrow afternoon - depending on the many anticipated aftershocks.

Hawaii people move to high ground. I have a few friends there who are doing just that right now.

Kind of a not too much info article actually now that I read it - may change it out. But it's also early reporting on a situation that is happening now.

chili.png


and where they predict the potential tsunamis...

chili1.jpg




_________________________________

http://www.buzzfeed.com/adolfoflore...of-chile?bffbnews&utm_term=4ldqpho#.anlKDNGYK

Magnitude-8.3 Earthquake Strikes Off Coast Of Chile; Tsunami Possible

The preliminary 8.3-magnitude earthquake on Wednesday was immediately followed by a tsunami alert for the Chile coast. A Tsunami Watch is also in effect for Hawaii.

Originally posted on Sept. 16, 2015, at 7:37 p.m.Updated on Sept. 16, 2015, at 7:53 p.m.
adolfoflores-4275-1416342113-18_large.jpg
Adolfo Flores

BuzzFeed News Reporter
earthquake.usgs.gov
The earthquake occurred off the coast of Coquimbo, Chile, at a depth of about 15.5 miles, the USGS reported. The original estimate was 7.8 miles.

The quake struck just offshore in the Pacific Ocean at 7:54 p.m. Chilean authoritiesinitially estimated the quake’s magnitude at 7.2. There have been five aftershocks.

Tsunami waves from the earthquake were possible within the next three hours along some coasts of Chile, Peru, and Hawaii, according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.

Strong shaking was reported in Chile, with residents fleeing outside, the Associated Press reported.

If tsunami waves hit Hawaii, the estimated earliest arrival was 12:33 a.m. Thursday.

wcatwc.arh.noaa.gov
Chile’s National Office of Emergency of the Interior Ministry told people who are on the coast to calmly evacuate to a safe zone.


The Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response’s model estimates there could be up to 100 people killed.

Panels and parts of the ceiling fell nearly 100 feet at the Costanera Center, a commercial complex with a six-floor shopping mall.

Neil Klopfenstein, 35, told BuzzFeed News he was in Santiago, Chile, when the earthquake struck. He said via Twitter that the sixth aftershock felt almost as intense as the initial quake, but that the power remained on.
 
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iamwhatiam

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damn. shitty time for it to happen (at night) for all the boat owners....but apparently we are not expected to have heavy inundation, so that's good
 
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Odin

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1960 Chile magnatude 9.5 largest earth boom boom on record.
Valdivia May 22, 1960 15:11 9.5/8.3
17px-WMA_button2b.png
39.500°S 74.500°W 1,655 Destructive tsunami.
Strongest earthquake in history.

Area is one of the most prone on the globe.

I recall sucuri having a great write up on his site hitchtheworld when helping out in Concepción'?? after an 8er in 2010 I believe.

They happen all the time and usually in that range... 7s and 8s... nothing like plate tectonics to shake things up.

Here is a list from wiki copypasted and tried to clean up a bit... hmmm interestingly Poseidon shakes that continent all the way down to Tierra Del Fuego... the southernmost tip of South America...

Before checking out the list below this is neat.

Here is a cool tool for seeing the difference between earthquakes of different magnitude.

http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learn/topics/calculator.php

So for example compare a 7 with an 8 a Mag Diff-1

A magnitude 8 earthquake
is 10 times bigger than
a 7 magnitude earthquake on a seismogram,
but is 31.622 times stronger (energy release).

And just to emphasize it... lets see the diff between a 7 and a 9 a Mag Diff-2

A magnitude 9 earthquake
is 100 times bigger than
a 7 magnitude earthquake on a seismogram,
but is 1000 times stronger (energy release).


Ohhhh Mother Nature! I BOw to YouR GREat and AwEsome poweR!


List from wiki past to present:

Concepción
February 8, 1570 9:00 8.3 MS
36.800°S 73.000°W
Destructive tsunami.

March 17, 1575 10:00 7.3 MS
33.400°S 70.600°W

Valdivia December 16, 1575 14:30 8.5 MS
39.800°S 73.200°W
Destructive tsunami.

Offshore Arica November 24, 1604 12:30 8.5 MS
18.500°S 70.400°W
Destructive tsunami.

Offshore Arica
September 16, 1615 23:30 8.8 MS
18.500°S 70.350°W
Moderate tsunami.

Santiago
May 13, 1647 22:30 8.5 MS
35.000°S 72.000°W

March 15, 1657 19:30 8.0 MS
36.830°S 73.030°W
Destructive tsunami.

March 10, 1681
7.3 MS
18.500°S 70.350°W

July 12, 1687 2:00 7.3 MS
32.750°S 70.730°W

Valparaíso July 8, 1730 4:45 8.7 MS
33.050°S 71.630°W
Destructive tsunami.

December 24, 1737
7.7 MS
39.800°S 73.200°W
Tsunami.

Concepción May 25, 1751 1:00 8.5 MS
36.830°S 73.030°W
Moderate tsunami.

March 30, 1796 6:45 7.7 MS
27.350°S 70.350°W

April 11, 1819 10:00 8.3 MS
27.350°S 70.350°W
Destructive tsunami.

Valparaíso November 19, 1822 22:30 8.5 MS
33.050°S 71.630°W
Moderate tsunami.

September 26, 1829 14:00 7.0 MS
33.050°S 71.630°W

October 8, 1831 6:00 7.8 MS
18.500°S 71.000°W

September 18, 1833 5:45 7.7 MS
18.500°S 70.400°W


Concepción February 20, 1835 11:30 8.5/8.2 MS/M?
36.830°S 73.030°W 500 Destructive tsunami.

November 7, 1837 8:00 8.0 MS
39.800°S 73.200°W
Moderate tsunami.

October 8, 1847 11:30 7.3 MS
31.610°S 71.180°W

December 17, 1849 6:00 7.5 MS
29.950°S 71.370°W
Moderate tsunami.

December 6, 1850 6:52 7.3 MS
33.810°S 70.220°W

April 2, 1851 6:48 7.1 MS
33.320°S 71.420°W

October 5, 1859 8:00 7.6 MS
27.350°S 70.350°W
Moderate tsunami.

Arica
August 13, 1868 16:45 9.0/8.5 M?/MS
18.500°S 70.350°W 25,000 Destructive tsunami.
At the time the area was part of Peru.

August 24, 1869 13:30 7.5 MS
19.600°S 70.230°W
Moderate tsunami.

October 5, 1871 5:00 7.3 MS
20.200°S 70.170°W
Tsunami.

Iquique
May 9, 1877 21:16 8.8 MS/M?
19.600°S 70.230°W 34 Destructive tsunami.

January 23, 1878 8:00 7.9 MS
20.000°S 70.300°W

February 2, 1879 6:30 7.3 MS
53.000°S 70.670°W

August 15, 1880 8:48 7.7 MS
31.620°S 71.180°W

Valparaíso August 16, 1906 19:48 8.2 MW
33.000°S 72.000°W 3,882 Moderate tsunami.

June 8, 1909 1:00 7.6 MS
26.500°S 70.500°W

October 4, 1910 19:00 7.3 MS
22.000°S 69.000°W

September 15, 1911 8:10 7.3 MS
20.000°S 72.000°W

January 29, 1914 23:30 8.2 MS
35.000°S 73.000°W

February 14, 1917 20:48 7.0 MS
30.000°S 73.000°W

May 20, 1918 12:57 7.9 MS
28.500°S 71.500°W

December 4, 1918 7:47 8.2 MS
26.000°S 71.000°W
Moderate tsunami.

March 1, 1919 23:37 7.2 MS
41.000°S 73.500°W

March 2, 1919 7:45 7.3 MS
41.000°S 73.500°W

December 10, 1920 0:25 7.4 MS
39.000°S 73.000°W

November 7, 1922 19:00 7.0 MS
28.000°S 72.000°W

Vallenar November 10, 1922 23:53 8.5 MW
28.500°S 70.000°W
Moderate tsunami.

May 4, 1923 17:47 7.0 MS
28.750°S 71.750°W

May 15, 1925 7:18 7.1 MS
26.000°S 71.500°W

April 28, 1926 7:13 7.0 MS
24.000°S 69.000°W

November 21, 1927 19:17 7.1 MS
44.500°S 73.000°W
Moderate tsunami.

November 20, 1928 16:35 7.1 MS
22.500°S 70.500°W

Talca December 1, 1928 0:06 8.3/7.6 MS/M?
35.000°S 72.000°W 225 Tsunami.

October 19, 1929 16:18 7.5 MS
23.000°S 69.000°W

March 18, 1931 4:02 7.1 MS
32.500°S 72.000°W

February 23, 1933 4:09 7.6 MS
20.000°S 71.000°W

March 1, 1936 17:45 7.1 MS
40.000°S 72.500°W

July 13, 1936 7:12 7.3 MS
24.500°S 70.000°W

Chillán January 24, 1939 23:32 8.3/7.8 MS/M?
36.200°S 72.200°W 28,000

April 18, 1939 2:22 7.4 MS
27.000°S 70.500°W

October 11, 1940 14:41 7.0 MS
41.500°S 74.500°W

July 8, 1942 1:55 7.0 MS
24.000°S 70.000°W

March 14, 1943 14:37 7.2 MS
20.000°S 69.500°W

Ovalle April 6, 1943 12:07 8.2 MW
30.750°S 72.000°W 25 Tsunami.

December 1, 1943 6:34 7.0 MS
21.000°S 69.000°W

July 13, 1945 7:17 7.1 MS
33.250°S 70.500°W

August 2, 1946 15:19 7.9 MS
26.500°S 70.500°W

April 19, 1949 23:29 7.3 MS
38.000°S 73.500°W

April 25, 1949 9:54 7.3 MS
19.750°S 69.000°W

May 29, 1949 21:32 7.0 MS
22.000°S 69.000°W

Tierra del Fuego December 17, 1949 2:53 7.8 MS
54.000°S 71.000°W/ 54°0′0″S 68°46′11″W

December 17, 1949 11:07 7.8 MS
54.000°S 71.000°W

January 29, 1950 20:56 7.0 MS
53.500°S 71.500°W

December 9, 1950 17:38 8.3 MS
23.500°S 67.500°W

May 6, 1953 13:16 7.6 MS
36.500°S 72.600°W

December 6, 1953 22:05 7.4 MS
22.100°S 68.700°W

February 8, 1954
7.7 MS 29.000°S 70.500°W

April 19, 1955 16:24 7.1 MS
30.000°S 72.000°W
Tsunami.

January 8, 1956 16:54 7.1 MS
19.000°S 70.000°W

December 17, 1956 22:31 7.0 MS
25.500°S 68.500°W

July 29, 1957 13:15 7.0 MS
23.500°S 71.500°W

June 13, 1959 20:12 7.5 MS
83 20.420°S 69.000°W

Concepción May 21, 1960 6:02 7.9/7.3
37.500°S 73.500°W

May 22, 1960 6:32 7.3 MS
37.500°S 73.000°W

Valdivia May 22, 1960 15:11 9.5/8.3
39.500°S 74.500°W 1,655 Destructive tsunami.
Strongest earthquake in history.

June 19, 1960 22:01 7.3 MS
38.000°S 73.500°W

November 1, 1960 4:45 7.4 MS
55 38.500°S 75.100°W

July 13, 1961 17:19 7.0 MS
40 41.700°S 75.200°W

February 14, 1962 2:36 7.3 MS
45 37.800°S 72.500°W

August 3, 1962 4:56 7.1 MS
107 23.300°S 68.100°W

Taltal February 23, 1965 18:11 7.0 MS
36 25.670°S 70.630°W 1

La Ligua March 28, 1965 12:33 7.4 MS
68 32.418°S 71.100°W 400

December 28, 1966 4:18 7.8 MS
23 25.510°S 70.740°W

March 13, 1967 12:06 7.3 MS
33 40.120°S 74.680°W

December 21, 1967 22:25 7.5 MS
33 21.800°S 70.000°W

June 17, 1971 17:00 7.0 MS
76 25.402°S 69.058°W

Illapel July 8, 1971 23:03 7.5 MS
40 32.511°S 71.207°W 90 Moderate tsunami.

August 18, 1974 6:44 7.1 MS
36 38.453°S 73.431°W

May 10, 1975 10:27 7.7 MS
6 38.183°S 73.232°W

November 29, 1976 21:40 7.3 MS
82 20.520°S 68.919°W

August 3, 1979 14:11 7.0 MS
49 26.518°S 70.664°W

October 16, 1981 0:25 7.5 MS
33 33.134°S 73.074°W

October 4, 1983 14:52 7.3 MS
14 26.535°S 70.563°W

Algarrobo March 3, 1985 19:46 8.0/7.8 MW/MS
33 33.240°S 71.850°W 177 Tsunami.

Rapel Lake
April 8, 1985 21:56 7.5 MS
37 34.131°S 71.618°W 1

Iquique March 5, 1987 6:17 7.3 MS
62 24.388°S 70.161°W
Tsunami.

August 8, 1987 11:48 7.1 MS
42 19.000°S 70.000°W

Antofagasta July 30, 1995 1:11 8.0 MW
47 23.360°S 70.310°W 3 Tsunami.

Punitaqui October 15, 1997 01:03 7.1 MW ]
56 30.773°S 71.315°W 8

Near coast of northern Chile January 30, 1998 12:16 (UTC) 7.1 M?
42 23.910°S 70.200°W 1 Minor damage to older buildings.
Chile-Argentina border region June 18, 2002
6.6 M?

Near coast of central Chile June 20, 2003 9:30 6.8 M?
12.8 30.520°S 71.420°W
Felt in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Biobío May 3, 2004 00:36 6.6 MW VI 21 37.649°S 73.439°W
Minor damage and power outages occurred at Cañete.

Tarapacá June 13, 2005 18:44 7.8 MW
108/117.2 19.895°S 69.125°W/ 19.934°S 69.028°W 11
Felt as far away as Santiago, Chile and Brasília, Brazil.

Tocopilla November 14, 2007 12:40 7.7 MW
47.7/40 22.314°S 70.078°W/ 22.204°S 69.869°W 2
Felt at São Paulo, Brazil.

Antofagasta December 16, 2007 5:09 6.7 MW
57.8 22.914°S 70.060°W 0
Disrupted power and telecommunications throughout
the epicentral area from Antofagasta to Iquique.

Tarapacá February 4, 2008 14:01 6.3 MW V 32.3 20.123°S 70.000°W

Papudo December 18, 2008 18:19 6.3/5.9 MW
32.416°S 71.533°W[5]/ 32°28′33″S 71°54′0″W

Offshore Tarapacá November 13, 2009 00:05 6.5 MW
28 19.385°S 70.266°W 0 Felt in Peru and Bolivia.

Drake Passage January 17, 2010 8:00 6.3 MW
57.6713°S 65.9097°W

Offshore Maule/Biobío February 27, 2010 03:34 8.8 MW
36.290°S 73.239°W/ 35.909°S 72.733°W 525 Destructive tsunami.

Pichilemu March 11, 2010 11:39 6.9 MW
34.259°S 71.929°W
34°18′3″S 72°7′47″W

Araucanía January 2, 2011 17:20 7.1/6.9 MW
38.354°S 73.275°W
38°21′43″S 75°1′55″W

Talca March 25, 2012 19:37 7.1/7.0 MW
35.183°S 71.792°W
35°12′0″S 72°13′1″W

Coquimbo October 31, 2013 23:03 6.5 MW
30.29°S 71.57°W [16]

Iquique Offshore Tarapacá March 16, 2014 18:10 7.0 Mw
19.981°S 70.702°W tsunami.

Iquique
Offshore Tarapacá April 1, 2014 20:46 8.2 Mw
19.610°S 70.769°W 7 tsunami.

Iquique Offshore Tarapacá
April 1, 2014 20:49 7.5 Mw
20.085°S 70.389°W

Iquique Offshore Tarapacá April 1, 2014 20:57 7.0 Mw
19.893°S 70.945°W

Iquique Offshore Tarapacá April 2, 2014 23:43 7.7 Mw
20.571°S 70.493°W tsunami

Valparaíso August 23, 2014 18:32 6.4
32.695°S 71.442°W

Easter Island October 8, 2014 21:14 7.0 Mw
32.108°S 110.811°W tsunami.

Talcahuano Offshore Biobío March 18, 2015 15:27 6.3 Mw
36.114°S 73.519°W

Arica and Parinacota March 23, 2015 01:51 6.4 Mw
18.353°S 69.166°W

Illapel September 16, 2015 19:54 8.3[21] Mw
31.563°S 71.737°W[21]
 
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Odin

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@iamwhatiam I believe I read earlier on thegaurdian... that Hawaii can expect areas with waves one to three meters...
can't find that again but have this from a cbs site.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/tsunami-warning-issued-for-hawaii-after-chile-earthquake/

"Based on all available data, a major tsunami is not expected to strike the state of Hawaii," the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said in a statement late Wednesday. "However, sea level changes and strong currents may occur along all coasts that could be a hazard to swimmers and boaters as well as to persons near the shore at beaches and in harbors and marinas. The threat may continue for several hours after the initial wave arrival."

If tsunami waves impact Hawaii, the estimated earliest arrival of the first tsunami wave is 3:11 a.m. HST on Thursday, CBS affiliate KGMB reported. Forecasters said waves of 0.3 to 1 meter above the tide level were possible.
 

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