A powerful earthquake has struck off the coast of Alaska, triggering a tsunami warning in the area.
The 7.0-magnitude quake happened at about 9:30 a.m. PST on Friday, about 16 kilometres northeast of Anchorage, the states’s largest city.
A tsunami warning was put into effect for the coastal areas of Cook Inlet and southern Kenai Peninsula in Alaska shortly after the earthquake hit, but was cancelled at 11 a.m. The region has also seen a series of aftershocks, at its peak reaching a magnitude of 5.8.
BREAKING: No tsunami warning in effect for B.C. following 7.2 magnitude earthquake 16 km northeast of Anchorage, Alaska. Tsunami warning for Cook Inlet and the Southern Kenai Peninsula. More to come @BlackPressMedia
— Ashley Wadhwani (@ashwadhwani) November 30, 2018
Emergency Management BC said there is no tsunami danger in this province.
Social media users out of the city said that shops and roads were rattled by the quake.
Earthquake just happened right now i ‘m actually shaking pic.twitter.com/PoZGOlJGWS
— Alyson Petrie (@AlysonPetrie7) November 30, 2018
Parents’ kitchen in Anchorage 😳 pic.twitter.com/uKGUDKZoIV
— Ari Tafreshi (@arlofresh) November 30, 2018
Ceiling is falling down pic.twitter.com/ZPY6fhEPrp
— Chase (@Chase_AK) November 30, 2018
Anchorage is no stranger to earthquakes. In 1964 the Alaskan city was struck by a 9.2-magnitude quake – the second most powerful ever recorded in the world. The earthquake and subsequent tsunami killed an estimated 139 people, some as far away as California.
In B.C., the resulting tsunami swept away 55 homes in Port Alberni.
A few seconds after earthquake at @middlewaycafe @ktva pic.twitter.com/1AYrHHNCIm
— Manny A. Creech (@KTVA_Manny) November 30, 2018
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