Tsunami ‘threat’ after 7.9 magnitude quake hits off Papua New Guinea
"Widespread hazardous tsunami waves are possible," the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) said in a message after the quake, which struck the New Ireland region of Papua New Guinea at a depth of 73 km.
The tsunami waves are forecast to reach one to three meters above the tide level along some coasts of the archipelago in the South West Pacific region.
The quake initially struck about 157 kilometers east of the port of Rabaul, Papua New Guinea, on Saturday and was measured at magnitude 8.0, according to the USGS. It was then re-scaled to magnitude 7.9.
Rabaul is a township on the island of New Britain, which has a population of some 3,885 people.
According to PTWC, a tsunami threat to Hawaii is still being evaluated.
While New Zealand's Civil Defense has issued an official tsunami warning, but no evacuations are necessary at this stage. The agency warned residents via its Twitter account to stay out of the water and off the beaches.
"At this stage we are advising New Zealanders to stay off the beaches, stay out of the water, not to go sightseeing and to listen to the radio and TV," a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management also said.
"The warning's been issued from the whole of NZ," she added.
Mainland New Zealand is some 4,500 kilometers or 2400 nautical miles away from Papua New Guinea.
According to @NewEarthquake, which monitors global earthquake and tsunami warnings, the initial quake has already been followed by at least three aftershocks, with magnitude 5.5-6.0.
Papua New Guinea lies on the so-called Pacific ‘Ring of Fire,’ a volcanically active region where earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions are common.
Source: rt.com