Tuesday 26 September 2017

Frantic Search Underway After A Week Of Earthquakes In Mexico | NBC Nightly News



WEEKEND MORE NOW FROM NBC'S MIGUEL ALMAGUER


>> Reporter: SIX DAYS AFTER THE DEADLY EARTHQUAKE HERE, SIGNS OF LIFE ARE STILL COMING FROM BENEATH THE RUBBLE SIX PEOPLE MAY BE ALIVE BURIED IN THIS BUILDING >> Reporter: DOZENS OF FAMILY MEMBERS ANXIOUSLY WAIT THIS MAN IS NOT ON THE LIST OF SURVIVORS SO HIS BROTHER DANIEL PRAYS


"WE KNOW THEY ARE WORKING VERY HARD," HE SAYS "WE HAVE HOPE THAT WON'T DIE" WITH MORE THAN A HUNDRED RESCUES, INCLUDING THIS DOG OVER THE WEEKEND, CHANCES FOR MIRACLES ARE FADING WHEN THIS SEVEN-STORE APARTMENT COMPLEX CAME CRASHING DOWN, THERE WERE 15 PEOPLE INSIDE, 12 WERE KILLED, 3 SURVIVORED IN THIS RATTLED COUNTRY, FEAR IS EVIDENT IN EVERYDAY LIFE, BUT TONIGHT IT'S LIVES THEY ARE TRYING


Source: Youtube



Frantic Search Underway After A Week Of Earthquakes In Mexico | NBC Nightly News

Friday 22 September 2017

Magnitude 5.7 earthquake strikes off Northern California coast



Magnitude 57 earthquake strikes off Northern California coast hallow magnitude 5


7 earthquake struck beneath the Pacific Ocean off the Northern California coast Friday afternoon, according to the US Geological Survey No tsunami warnings were issued for the coast, according to the National Weather Service The temblor occurred at 12:50 p


m at a depth of 25 miles, according to the USGS Its epicenter was roughly 122 miles west of the historic village of Ferndale on California’s Lost Coast Related: California could be hit by an 8


2 mega-earthquake, and it would be catastrophic There were few indications on social media that the quake was strongly felt, if at all Neither the Eureka nor Fortuna police departments reported that they felt anything or received reports of damage Within 20 seconds of the larger quake, the USGS reported on its website a 5 6 magnitude temblor that was closer to the California coast, but deleted it later


There was only one event, and that was the 5 7, said Justin Pressfield, a spokesman for the USGS Pressfield said there was a discrepancy in different scientific networks reading of the data from the earthquake, which resulted in a mistaken reporting of two quakes According to the USGS website, the quake was felt by a some people in the greater Eureka area That quake was followed by a 3


9-magnitude aftershock A smaller 3 3 earthquake did occur beneath the Pacific in the same general area around 10 a , however California’s north coast is one of the state’s most seismically active areas, regularly producing major earthquakes


There had been other smaller quakes in the area in recent days In January 2010, a 6 5 quake hit the area, snapping power lines, toppling chimneys, knocking down traffic signals, shattering windows and prompting the evacuation of at least one apartment building A 6 9 earthquake struck the same area in 2014, and a 6


5 quake hit last December


Source: Youtube



Magnitude 5.7 earthquake strikes off Northern California coast

Small earthquake registered near Los Olivos



MEANWHILE — MANY FOLKS IN SANTA BARBARA COUNTY FELT SMALL EARTHQUAKE THAT RATTLED THE AREA THE U-S-G-S SAYS THE TWO-POINT- NINE MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE STRUCK JUST NORTHWEST OF LOS OLIVOS AROUND FIVE THIS EVENING


THERE HAVE BEEN NO REPORTS OF ANY


Source: Youtube



Small earthquake registered near Los Olivos

Thursday 21 September 2017

Spokane resident relieved after family survives Mexico earthquake



Waiting for news about loved ones in the Mexico earthquake zone can be agonizing, especially when you're thousands of miles away and nobody is answering their phones A local man, who was born in Mexico City, explains how it took him almost 24 hours before the first messages from relatives came through and what that feel is like


Half an hour after the 71 magnitude earthquake hit near Mexico City, Spokane resident Ivan Torres hit Facebook, What's App and any other way he could, to find check on his family And I just started texting and nobody would get back to me, His parents are in the states but he has aunts, uncles and cousins in Mexico City Si, primo Gracias por preguntar, A difficult wait for Torres as pictures of the devastation kept flooding the news


I'm just worried about a few friends that are stuck inside a building, Eventually, messages started to get through Oh yeah it took a long time because, there's still some areas, I believe, that there's no power, Some messages were encouraging, others like one from his uncle, were very concerning The one in gray there's where he says, 'I don't know about my daughters,' Coincidentally, Torres was born in Mexico City in 1985 He was only months old when a 81 magnitude quake killed thousands in the area


His family remembers that one and won't forget this one either They said it was scary, I mean panic Basically, everybody just went outside, some where holding onto cars some where holding onto each other, Thankfully all his relatives survived the disaster Now they're helping clean up and dig out Where my uncle works they have to assess the building because of the cracks, It's a process that's just getting started and a rebuild that could take months, even years


Source: Youtube



Spokane resident relieved after family survives Mexico earthquake

Tuesday 19 September 2017

Dozens Dead In 7.1 Magnitude Central Mexico Earthquake



WE BEGIN WITH BREAKING NEWS AT 4:00, A POWERFUL 7.


1 MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE HITTING NEW MEXICO CITY TODAY.


THIS AFTERNOON THE GOVERNOR OF MORELLO SAID THE QUAKE KILLED AT LEAST 42 PEOPLE IN HIS STATE THE EPICENTER EAST OF THE CAPITAL CITY AND COMES ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF A DEVASTATING 1985 EARTHQUAKE.


DEBRIS FROM BUILDINGS LITTER THE GROUND AFTER A POWERFUL 7.


1 MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE IN CENTRAL MEXICO.


U.


S.


GEOLOGICAL SURVEY SAYS THE TREMOR WAS CENTERED 76 MILES AWAY FROM MEXICO CITY.


VIDEO IN SHOWS IN THE ENTIRE BUILDING COLLAPSING AND ANOTHER VIDEO SHOWS LIGHT TEXTURE SWAYING BACK AND FORTH.


WORKERS HUDDLED AGAINST A WALL FOR PROTECTION.


ALARMS WARNED RESIDENTS TO GET SOMEWHERE SAFE.


OFFICE WORKERS RAIN INTO THE STREET IN THE MAIN SQUARE.


THE QUAKE WAS SO POWERFUL IT ALSO CAUSED WAVES ON THIS ROOFTOP POOL.


PARTS OF MEXICO WERE BUILT ON A LAKEBED WHICH MAGNIFIES THE EFFECTS OF EARTHQUAKES HUNDREDS.


Source: Youtube



Dozens Dead In 7.1 Magnitude Central Mexico Earthquake

Scores Killed In 7.1 Mexico Earthquake On Anniversary Of 1985 Quake Disaster



STREETS OF MEXICO CITY.


A MASSIVE QUAKE STRIKES FOR THE SECOND TIME THIS MONTH.


ANOTHER TEST OF THE COUNTRY'S SOPHISTICATED EARLY WARNING SYSTEM.


GOOD EVENING, I'M ALLEN MARTIN.


I'M VERONICA DE LA CRUZ.


THE EARTHQUAKE WAS CENTERED IN THE MEXICAN STATE OF PUEBLA — LESS THAN 100 MILES SOUTH EAST OF MEXICO CITY.


THE 7-POINT-1 QUAKE TOPPLED DOZEN OF BUILDINGS.


AND SENT RESCUE WORKERS DIGGING THROUGH RUBBLE.


MEXICO CITY'S MAYOR SAYS: BETWEEN 50 AND 60 PEOPLE WERE PULLED OUT ALIVE.


BUT STATE OFFICIALS SAY: THE DEATH TOLL IS CLIMBING.


AT LAST CHECK – 120 CONFIRMED DEAD.


INCREDIBLY, IT WAS ON THIS DAY, 32 YEARS AGO, THAT A MAGNITUDE EIGHT QUAKE KILLED NEARLY 10- THOUSAND PEOPLE IN MEXICO CITY.


KPIX 5'S SUSIE STEIMLE JOINS US.


WITH A LOOK AT TODAY'S DAMAGE.


SUSIE? THIS IS HIGHEST DEATH TOLL MEXICO HAS SEEN FROM AN EARTHQUAKE SINCE THAT 1985 QUAKE 32 YEARS AGO.


MEXICO CITY'S MAYOR TOLD REPORTERS THAT AT LEAST 30 OF THOSE 120 DEATHS OCCURED IN THE CAPITAL.


44 BUILDINGS IN MEXICO CITY EITHER COLLAPSED OR WERE BADLY DAMAGED TODAY.


THE SEARCH IS ON FOR SURVIVORS TRAPPED INSIDE CRUMBLED BUILDINGS IN MEXICO CITY.


THE EARTHQUAKE OCCURRED AT 11:19 PACIFIC TIME, SPLITTING STREETS, SHAKING SKYSCRAPERS AND SENDING PEOPLE SCREAMING INTO THE STREETS.


IT COMES ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF MEXICO CITY'S DEVASTATING 1985 EARTHQUAKE THAT TOOK THE LIVES OF THOUSANDS.


POLITICIANS HELD A MEMORIAL THIS MORNING FOLLOWED BY EARTHQUAKE PREPAREDNESS DRILLS.


THAT 1985 QUAKE PROMPTED MEXICO TO PUT IN PLACE AN EARLY WARNING SYSTEM THAT SENDS ALERTS TO PEOPLE'S PHONES THE MOMENT SHAKING STARTS, AT TIMES IT'S GIVEN PEOPLE UP TO A MINUTE TO PREPARE.


"01:07 moderate shaking expected in 22 seconds" KPIX-5 FIRST REPORTED PLANS FOR A SIMILAR SYSTEM IN CALIFORNIA BACK IN 2012.


JAPAN HAS AN EARLY WARNING SYSTEM IN PLACE AS WELL.


BOTH JAPAN AND MEXICO WERE MOTIVATED TO BUILD THESE SYSTEMS AFTER MASSIVE EARTHQUAKES CLAIMED THE LIVES OF THOUSANDS.


CALIFORNIA HAS YET TO COME UP WITH THE FUNDING FOR ITS OWN SYSTEM.


SOME SEISMIC SENSORS HAVE ALREADY BEEN PUT IN PLACE, BUT NEARLY 1000 MORE ARE NEEDED.


RESEARCHERS ARE HOPING IT DOESN'T TAKE A DISASTER HERE TO MOTIVATE POLITICIANS TO TAKE ACTION.


1:37 if the presidents budget is passed by congress the program will be stopped because this is one of the things being eliminated PRESIDENT TRUMP DID TWEET HIS SUPPORT SAYING "GOD BLESS THE PEOPLE OF MEXICO CITY.


WE ARE WITH YOU AND WILL BE THERE FOR YOU.


" SS KPIX 5.


Source: Youtube



Scores Killed In 7.1 Mexico Earthquake On Anniversary Of 1985 Quake Disaster

Monday 11 September 2017

Man survives deadly Mexico earthquake, family not bracing for Hurricane Irma



JUST BEGINNING.


THEY'RE IN FLORIDA, BRACING FOR HURRICANE IRMA.


HEA WENT DARK.


>> Reporter: MEXICO CITY WAS ON HIS RADAR.


JUST SIX HOURS AFTER LANDING, HE WAS WALLS WERE GOING ONE WAY, AND THE FLOOR WAS GOING ANOTHER WAY, AND OUR BODIES WERE GOING A THIRD WAY.


>> Reporter: BY DAYBREAK, LIFE HEAD BACK T HREATENED HIM EVEN MORE.


>> MY FAMILY RIGHT NOW IS LITERALLY ALL BUNKERED UP IN ONE OF OUR FAMILY MEMBERS' HOU >> LUCKILY I'VE BEEN ABLE TO STAY IN CONTACT WITH THEM.


AT ANY MOMENT THEY COULD LOSE CONTACT.


HOPES OTHERS DID.


HE'S JUST ANXIOUS FOR THE STORM TO PASS AND TO HEAR THE NEWS TH WITH ALL OF THAT IN ONE WEEK.


>>> HURRICANE IRMA IS BARRELLING TOWARD FLORIDA.


THE CENTER OF THE STORM JUST 90 MILES SOUTH EAST OF KEY WEST.


MORE THAN 170 THOUSAND HOMES AND BUSINESSES ARE WITHOUT POWER.


AT STORM.


JASON, HURRICANE FORCE WINDS ARE HARD FOR US TO IMAGINE BEING IN ARIZON >> THAT'S FOR SURE.


WINDS 20, 30 MILMILES AN HOUR OR ABOVE, THAT'S SOMETHING THAT'S HARDER TO IMAGINE.


CHRISTOPHER KING WITH OUR SISTER STATION SHOWS US WHAT HURRICANE OF FOR TRY TO WEATHER UNFORGIVING WIND.


I HAVE TO STAND AS UPRIGHT AS I CAN AND BRACE MYSELF SO THE WIND DOESN'TIC YOU CAN'T HEAR ME ABOVE THE ROAR OF THE WIND.


>> Reporter: CATEGORY 2, AT LEAST 96 MILES AN HOUR.


I STILLOF THE WIND KNOCKS ME BACK.


KIBARELY KEEP MY FOOTING.


MANAGER AND CHIEF INSTRUCTOR ROB KEEPS ME FROM TAKING OFF AIR.


IN THE TUNNEL, ABOUT 120 MILES AN HOUR.


HURRICANE IRMA, A CATEGORY 5 AT ITS PEAK, MOVING THROUGH CARIBBEAN WITH A FORCE O CONSISTENT WIND.


IMAGINE TRYING TO SURVIVE OUTDOORS IN A HURRICANE WITH WIND BLASTING YOU FR REAL HURRICANE, 90, 120.


Source: Youtube



Man survives deadly Mexico earthquake, family not bracing for Hurricane Irma

Saturday 9 September 2017

Mexico Earthquake, Strongest in a Century, Kills Dozens


Mexico Earthquake, Strongest in a Century, Kills Dozens MEXICO CITY — The most powerful earthquake to hit Mexico in 100 years struck off the nation’s Pacific Coast late Thursday, rattling millions of residents in Mexico City with its violent tremors, killing at least 32 people and leveling some areas in the southern part of the country, closer to the quake’s epicenter.


About 50 million people across Mexico felt the earthquake, which had a magnitude of 8.


2, the government said.


In the capital, the force of the temblor sent residents of the megacity fleeing into the streets at midnight, shaken by alarms blaring over loudspeakers and a full minute of tremors.


Windows broke, walls collapsed, and the city seemed to convulse in terrifying waves; the quake even rocked the city’s Angel of Independence monument.


While Mexico City seemed to have been spared extensive damage to infrastructure, according to the government’s preliminary assessment, the effects in the southern states of Chiapas and Oaxaca were probably more severe.


The tally of damage — and death — probably will be difficult to assess initially, given that many areas are remote.


Alejandro Murat, the governor of Oaxaca, told the Televisa network that at least 23 people had died in the state, and local officials said residents were buried under the rubble of buildings.


Luis Manuel García Moreno, the secretary of civil defense for the state of Chiapas, said the toll there had risen to seven, and two children died in the state of Tabasco, one when a wall collapsed, the other after a respirator lost power in a hospital.


The effects were also felt in Guatemala, where at least one person died and homes along the border with Mexico were leveled.


Schools in at least 10 Mexican states and in Mexico City were closed on Friday as the president ordered an immediate assessment of the damage nationwide.


In the hours after the quake, the National Seismological Service registered several aftershocks.


Still, the resounding feeling in the country was one, at least initially, of relief that the damage was not more widespread, given the nation’s vulnerability to earthquakes and the capital’s extreme density.


“We are assessing the damage, which will probably take hours, if not days,” said President Enrique Peña Nieto, who addressed the nation just two hours after the quake.


“But the population is safe over all.


There should not be a major sense of panic.


”.


Mexico is situated near several boundaries where portions of the earth’s crust collide.


The quake on Thursday was more powerful than the one that killed nearly 10,000 people in 1985.


While the quake on Thursday struck nearly 450 miles from the capital and off the coast of Chiapas State, the one in 1985 was much closer to the city — so the shaking, coupled with Mexico City being on an ancient lake bed, proved much more deadly.


After the 1985 disaster, construction codes were reviewed and stiffened.


Today, Mexico’s construction laws are considered as strict as those in the United States or Japan.


After the quake hit, people in Mexico City streamed out of their homes in the dark, wearing nightclothes, standing amid apartment buildings, cafes and bars in upscale neighborhoods and dense warrens of the city’s working-class communities.


In the Condesa area, neighbors watched in awe as power lines swayed alongside trees and buildings.


In several neighborhoods, the power went out, though it was restored within an hour, at least in the wealthier parts of the capital.


For a city used to earthquakes, Thursday’s quake left a lasting impression on residents, for both its force and duration.


“The scariest part of it all is that if you are an adult, and you’ve lived in this city your adult life, you remember 1985 very vividly,” said Alberto Briseño, a 58-year-old bar manager in Condesa.


“This felt as strong and as bad, but from what I see, we’ve been spared from major tragedy.


”.


“Now we will do what us Mexicans do so well: take the bitter taste of this night and move on,” he added.


The earthquake appeared to hit Juchitán, a city of about 100,000 people on the Pacific Coast of Oaxaca state, the hardest.


The regional hospital, a church dedicated to the city’s patron saint, San Vicente Ferrer, and half of the city’s nineteenth-century city hall collapsed, said Juan Antonio García, the director of a local news website, Cortamortaja.


Hospital staff managed to evacuate the patients in time and treated them by the light of their cellphones through the night in an empty lot, he said.


Juchitán’s city hall was a handsome two-story building, famous for its 30 arches occupying the entire block of the city’s central square.


But as the earth shook just before midnight, half of the structure was reduced to rubble.


“Countless houses have collapsed,” Mr García said, adding that it was too early to say how extensive the damage was.


In a video posted on the Facebook page of a local television station, Pamela Terán, who introduced herself as a city councilor, begged the state and federal authorities for help.


“Please, we urgently need as much help as you can send,” she said.


“We need hands and manpower to try and dig out the people that we know are buried under the rubble.


”.


The quake occurred near the Middle America Trench, a zone in the eastern Pacific where one slab of the earth’s crust, called the Cocos Plate, is sliding under another, the North American, in a process called subduction.


The movement is very slow — about three inches a year — and over time stress builds because of friction between the slabs.


At some point, the strain becomes so great that the rock breaks and slips along a fault.


This releases vast amounts of energy and, if the slip occurs under the ocean, can move a lot of water suddenly, causing a tsunami.


Subduction zones ring the Pacific Ocean and are also found in other regions.


They are responsible for the world’s largest earthquakes and most devastating tsunamis.


The magnitude 9 earthquake off Japan in 2011 that led to the Fukushima nuclear disaster and the magnitude 9.


1 quake in Indonesia in 2004 that spawned tsunamis that killed a quarter of a million people around the Indian Ocean are recent examples.


Those quakes each released about 30 times as much energy as the one in Mexico.


Mexico’s government issued a tsunami warning off the coast of Oaxaca and Chiapas after Thursday’s quake, but neither state appeared to have been adversely affected by waves.


The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said the largest wave recorded on Mexico’s Pacific Coast measured less than four feet.


In his address, Mr Peña Nieto said that aftershocks were of greater concern than the waves generated by the earthquake, which he said was the strongest to hit the country in a century.


Rudy Gomez, 28, who lives in the Condesa neighborhood of Mexico City, said that he spoke to relatives in Chiapas by phone after the quake and that they were all fine.


They were worried, however, about the aftershocks.


“After the earthquake, there were three more,” he said of the aftershocks in Chiapas.


“They are just waiting to see if there is another one to come, but right now they are O.


K.


”.


In Guatemala, the military was out Friday morning assessing the damage, found mainly in the western part of the country.


In Huehuetenango, bricks and glass were strewn on the ground as walls in the city collapsed.


Quetzaltenango, Guatemala’s second-largest city, which was beginning to recover from a tremor in June, suffered more damage to its historic center.


Source: Youtube



Mexico Earthquake, Strongest in a Century, Kills Dozens

Mexico 15 Years of Earthquake


[music playing].


Source: Youtube



Mexico 15 Years of Earthquake