A powerful
earthquake of magnitude 7.9 struck off the coast of Alaska early Tuesday,
prompting tsunami warnings or watches as far away as California.
The quake
struck at 0931 GMT in the Gulf of Alaska, 280 kilometers (175 miles) southeast
of the town of Kodiak, the US Geological Survey said, revising a preliminary
estimate of 8.2 magnitude. The epicenter was 10 kilometers under the seabed.
Tsunami
warnings were issued for south and southeast Alaska and the west coast of
Canada, the National Tsunami Warning Center said.
Less-ominous
tsunami watches were issued for the US west coast — the entire coasts of
California and Oregon and part of Washington state — and Hawaii out in the
Pacific.
Heather
Rand, who was 360 miles away in Anchorage, told CNN it felt like the longest
earthquake she had ever experienced.
“It was a
very long, slow build up. Creepy, more than anything. Definitely the longest,
and I was born here,” Rand said, adding the only damage was cracks in the wall.
In Alaska,
authorities urged coast dwellers to seek safety.
“If you are
located in this coastal area, move inland to higher ground,” the Anchorage
Office of Emergency Management said.
“Tsunami
warnings mean that a tsunami with significant inundation is possible or is
already occurring. Tsunamis are a series of waves dangerous many hours after
initial arrival time. The first wave may not be the largest.”
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