A powerful 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck near the Solomon Islands in the western Pacific on Monday with the potential to cause a local tsunami, seismologists said.
A powerful 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck near the Solomon Islands in the western Pacific on Monday with the potential to cause a local tsunami, seismologists said.
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The US Geological Survey said the quake struck about 103 km from the island town of Gizo at about 9:36 am (2236 GMT Sunday) and was measured at a depth of about 30 km (19 miles).
No tsunami alert was issued but the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said quakes of this size could create local tsunamis that can be destructive along coasts located within a few hundred kilometres of the earthquake epicentre.
It came less than an hour after a 6.5 magnitude earthquake struck near the archipelago at 8:48 am. USGS said the epicentre of the first quake was 143 km south-southeast of Gizo, which is the second largest town in the Solomon Islands with a population of around 6,000. "It's a big earthquake but it's probably not going to cause a large regional tsunami," Geoscience Australia seismologist Clive Collins said.
"It has potential there for a (local) tsunami but we haven't heard of anything as yet. I don't think there's any problem but we don't any information as yet," he said.
Collins said the quake, which was estimated at 7.0 magnitude by Australian seismologists, was probably about 80 km from the nearest land, but not the Solomons' main island where the capital Honiara is located.