A tsunami warning, later downgraded to an advisory, prompted the
evacuation of about 200 residents of the town of Adak to higher
ground, city manager Layton Lockett said.
There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage from the
quake, which was initially measured at a magnitude of 8.0 but later
downgraded.
The quake was so large and deep that it triggered dozens of
aftershocks within an hour and prompted enough shaking to be picked
up by seismometers around the world over the next 24 hours, said
Mike West, a seismologist who serves as director of the Alaska
Earthquake Center.
A tsunami wave of roughly 19 centimeters (7.5 inches) was measured
at Amchitka Island, in the Aleutian Islands chain, though lesser
heights were recorded at other islands, said National Tsunami
Warning Center oceanographer Bo Bahng.
"When you've got an earthquake that big, it rings the Earth like a
bell," West said.
Lockett said he and his staff were in their offices when the
earthquake struck.
"Oh, we felt it," he said. "We felt it in length, in duration and in
intensity. We were sitting there for about 20 seconds, then we went
outside and it kept going and going and going."
The tsunami warning covered coastal areas from Nikolski to Attu at
the western end of the Aleutian island chain.
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration initially
warned of widespread, dangerous coastal flooding and powerful
currents in the region for hours in the event of a tsunami. The
warning was downgraded about two hours after the earthquake hit.
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The quake struck shortly before 1 p.m. on Monday, about 14 miles (23
km) southeast of Little Sitkin Island, Alaska, at a depth of about
71 miles (114 km), the USGS said.
Tsunamis are waves resulting from undersea quakes that can measure
several yards (meters) high and can overwhelm coastal areas near and
far, NOAA said. It takes a large quake of magnitude 7.0 or higher to
produce a tsunami, the center said.
In 2004, a tsunami produced by a magnitude 9.3 undersea earthquake
struck near Indonesia and 240,000 people were killed, the center
noted.
(Reporting by Steve Quinn; Additional reporting by Eric Beech in
Washington; Writing by Sharon Bernstein and Eric M. Johnson; Editing
by Jim Loney, Will Dunham and Tom Heneghan)
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