Great Earthquakes In Diverse Places
Southern Taiwan jolted by 6.4-magnitude Earthquake
March 3, 2010 10:45 p.m. EST
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
* 6.4 quake rocks southern Taiwan at about 0120 GMT
* Aftershocks follow; no immediate reports of deaths
* Quake hits northwest of Taitung, on the southeast coast
* Residents in southern Taiwan report blackouts; train services
disrupted
(CNN) -- A 6.4-magnitude earthquake rocked southern Taiwan on Thursday
morning, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. There were no
immediate reports of deaths or serious injuries.
Taiwan's interior ministry reported 11 minor injuries.
The quake struck at about 8:20 a.m. (7:20 p.m. Wednesday ET) in a
mountainous region about 25 miles northwest of Taitung, on the
southeast coast, and 40 miles east of Tainan and Kaohsiung on the
southwest coast.
The region, which includes Taiwan's Maolin National Scenic Area, is
recovering from a direct hit by Typhoon Morakot that killed hundreds in
August. The typhoon dumped more than two feet of rain, causing serious
mudslides in the south, including one that buried the village of Shiao
Lin under 50 feet of mud.
Shuo Hong, an orthopedic surgeon in Taipei, about 155 miles away from
the epicenter, felt the earthquake during a meeting at a hospital. "We
were debating whether or not to run for shelter," he said, "but the
hospital is safe. It is built to resist a 7.0-magnitude earthquake.
"It was shaking for about 20-30 seconds, shaking more than what we
expected," Hong said.
Thursday's quake was followed by more than a dozen aftershocks, the
largest reaching 4.8. The initial 6.4 quake rumbled to the surface from
14 miles deep.
The Taiwan Ministry of Interior and the National Fire Agency said
electricity was cut off in parts of Kaohsiung county, Jia Yi city and
Jia Yi county. Taiwan's official news agency reported that a fire broke
out in Jia Yi city.
Of the minor injuries reported, the interior ministry said that nine
were in Kao Hsiung county and two were in Jia Yi county.
Residents in southern Taiwan reported cracks in some buildings and
major bridges. Train service was also disrupted in some areas,
Taiwanese media reported.
Two small hotels near the epicenter that were contacted by CNN reported
no damage, though the buildings shook for a few seconds during the
quake.
Albert Yu, communications manager of the humanitarian organization
World Vision, told CNN he was about halfway through a 90-minute trip
via high-speed train from Taipei to Tainan when the quake struck.
Passengers did not feel the quake, he said, but operators stopped the
train and announced what had happened. More than an hour later, the
train had not resumed service.
"The operator is examining the train and the tracks," he said, adding
that there was concern about the stability of the area, particularly
after the typhoon. "Inside the train, people are calm and are waiting
it out -- opening laptops, starting to work and chatting with people
around them."
Yu said World Vision "has already been on high alert responding to the
quakes in Haiti and Chile, so we're closely monitoring reports in the
earthquake in southern Taiwan."
Residents in the capital Taipei, 155 miles to the north, also felt the
shaking.
Earthquakes are not uncommon in the 13,892-square-mile island -- about
the size of the U.S. states of Maryland and Delaware combined -- which
sits across the juncture of the Eurasian and Philippine tectonic plates.
A 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck the same general region in December.
The island took a double hit on December 26, 2006, when earthquakes of
7.1 and 6.9 magnitude hit eight minutes apart.
The largest recorded quake to strike Taiwan was an 8.0-magnitude quake
in 1920, but the worst earthquake disaster stemmed from a 7.1-magnitude
quake in 1935 that killed more than 3,200 people -- followed by a
6.5-magnitude quake that killed more than 2,700 people three months
later.
More recently, a 7.6 magnitude-earthquake killed more than 2,400 people
in 1999.
CNN's Christine Theodorou and Journalist Andrew Lee contributed to this
report