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Chile Quake in 'Elite Class' Like 2004 Asian Quake


Chile Quake in 'Elite Class' Like 2004 Asian Quake - ABC News


The huge earthquake that struck off the coast of Chile belongs to an  "elite class" of mega earthquakes, experts said, and is similar to the  2004 Indian Ocean temblor that triggered deadly tsunami waves.


  The magnitude-8.8 quake was a type called a "megathrust," considered the  most powerful earthquake on the planet. Megathrusts occur when one  tectonic plate dives beneath another. Saturday's tremor unleashed about  50 gigatons of energy and broke about 250 miles of the fault zone, said  U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist Paul Caruso.


  The quake's epicenter was offshore and occurred about 140 miles north of  the largest earthquake ever recorded — a magnitude-9.5 that killed  about 1,600 people in Chile and scores of others in the Pacific in 1960.


  "It's part of an elite class of giant earthquakes," said USGS geologist  Brian Atwater.


  If the magnitude holds, it will tie with the 1906 offshore Ecuador quake  as the fifth largest since 1900.


  "We call them great earthquakes. Everybody else calls them horrible,"  said USGS geophysicist Ken Hudnut. "There's only a few in this league."


   The Chile quake was smaller than the Sumatra quake of 2004, a  magnitude-9.1 and was not expected to be anything nearly as destructive.  That quake and ensuing tsunami killed 230,000 people. Another  difference is that the Chile quake triggered tsunami warnings hours  ahead of time in Hawaii and Pacific islands, allowing people time to  flee to higher ground.


  In 2004, there was little measuring technology in place to warn Indian  Ocean countries about incoming killer waves.


  So far, the quake death toll has surpassed 200. Several more died when  tsunami waves swamped an island off the country's coast.


  Chile is no stranger to violent jolts. In fact, USGS geophysicist Ross  Stein called the country an "earthquake hatchery." Thirteen temblors of  magnitude 7 or larger have hit Chile since 1973.


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