Great Chilean Earthquake
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Image:Valdivia after earthquake, 1960.jpg Image:Eruption of Puyehue, 1960.jpg
The Great Chilean Earthquake or Valdivia Earthquake (Terremoto de Valdivia in Spanish) of May 22, 1960 is the largest magnitude earthquake recorded since seismographic monitoring began. Striking at 19:11 UTC (early afternoon local time), it measured 9.5 magnitude and affected southern Chile.
There had been a swarm of earthquakes, as large as magnitude 8, about 160 km (100 miles) to the north the previous day.
Its epicenter was located in Valdivia, approximately 700 kilometers (435 miles) south of Santiago. The earthquake caused a tsunami that hit the Chilean coast severely, with waves up to 25 metres high, ran through the Pacific Ocean and devastated Hilo, Hawaii, 10,000 kilometers (6,200 miles) from the epicenter, as well as coastal regions of Japan. The total number of fatalities from the earthquake/tsunami combination was estimated to have been as many as 3,000.
Despite the record strength of the earthquake, more people were killed by tsunamis than by the earthquake.
External links and references
- USGS report on the earthquake
- Chilean earthquake and tsunami
- USGS: Chilean earthquake: surviving the tsunamis
- Tsunami of 1960
- Hawaii Eventsde:Großes Chile-Erdbeben
es:Terremoto de Valdivia de 1960 fr:Tremblement de terre de 1960 au Chili ja:チリ地震 lv:Lielā Čīles zemestrīce pl:Trzęsienie ziemi w Chile, 1960 pt:Grande Terremoto do Chile