Great Earthquakes In Diverse Places
Chilean residents on edge over fear of aftershocks
February 28, 2010 4:33 a.m. EST
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
* Chilean government expected to update death toll from quake Sunday
* Chilean residents sleep outside, scared to go inside damaged homes
* No major damage, injuries reported in Hawaii, Japan after quake
triggers tsunami
Santiago, Chile (CNN) -- Wary residents fearing aftershocks camped
outside on mattresses and lawn chairs early Sunday after one of the
most powerful earthquakes to hit the world in decades flattened
buildings and blanketed the capital city in darkness.
The 8.8-magnitude quake, that struck early Saturday, toppled 500,000
structures, affected 2 million people and dealt a serious blow to one
of Latin American's most stable economies.
Authorities placed the preliminary death toll at more than 300, but the
government is expected to update the casualty count at 12 p.m. local
time (10 a.m. ET).
"The number of victims could get higher," said President-elect
Sebastian Pinera, who will take office in March.
The waves struck the island state of Hawaii as a series of small waves
without causing damage, said Gov. Linda Lingle.
In Japan, the first waves to strike shore were also small, but
authorities still asked thousands of evacuated residents to stay away
because a second and third round of waves could gain strength.
Saturday's quake was 700 to 800 times stronger than the 7.0-magnitude
quake that struck Haiti in January. That quake left 212,000 people dead
and more than a million homeless.
The quake also occurred at a depth of 21.7 miles, compared to the
shallow 8.1-mile depth of the Haiti quake, which contributed to much of
the damage there.
Those whose homes hadn't been reduced to rubble in Santiago refused to
go inside, fearing aftershocks that could send the structures tumbling.
They settled in for the night, lighting bonfires or using the glow of
flashlights to communicate with each other as aftershocks continued to
rattle nerves.
"I've been using my glass of water to verify it's not just in my mind,"
said Luke Mescher, an American college student in Santiago. "You can
see the water wobbling back and forth every time that it happens."
Coastal Chile has a history of deadly earthquakes, with 13 quakes of
magnitude 7.0 or higher since 1973, the U.S. Geological Survey said. As
a result, experts said that newer buildings are constructed to help
withstand the shocks.
Still, the damage from Chile's earthquake was widespread. A 15-story
high-rise near the southern city of Concepcion collapsed; the country's
major north-south highway was severed at multiple points; and
Santiago's airport was closed after its terminal sustained major damage.
Chilean President Michelle Bachelet announced that all public events
would be canceled for the next 72 hours and that the start of the
school year, originally scheduled for Monday, would be delayed until
March 8.
"Our history is full of natural disasters that have tested our
strength, but our history also has registered the perseverance of our
people." she said in a televised address. "We have done it before; I
have no doubt that we will move forward once again."
The quake struck at 3:34 a.m. (1:34 a.m. ET) Saturday off the Pacific
coast about 60 miles (100 kilometers) northwest of Chillan, Chile, the
USGS said. Santiago is 200 miles (325 kilometers) northeast of the
epicenter.
Saturday's epicenter was just a few miles north of the largest
earthquake recorded in the world: a magnitude 9.5 quake in May 1960
that killed 1,655 and unleashed a tsunami that crossed the Pacific.
The quake was followed by more than 76 aftershocks of 4.9 magnitude or
greater, the USGS said.
That included a 6.1-magnitude quake in Argentina that killed a
58-year-old man and an 8-year-old boy in separate towns, the
government-run Telam news agency said.
Some buildings in the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires, were evacuated,
though the city is 690 miles (1,111 kilometers) from Santiago.
A large wave Saturday killed six people on the island of Juan
Fernandez, 400 miles (643 kilometers) off the coast of Chile. Eleven
others were declared missing.
Across Chile, desperate relatives spent the day searching for missing
loved ones.
"My parents, I was able to talk to them for a very short phone call. I
have my cousins who are still unaccounted for," said Andrea Riffo who
lives in Santiago but was trying to reach family members in Concepcion.
"The lines are down everywhere."
For the lucky ones such as Nica Motles, the damage was mostly material.
"The building didn't get damaged at all on the outside, but the walls
are cracked. The walls, the decorations, glasses, dishes," she said
Sunday morning.
But for the unfortunate, the task of recovering them fell to rescue
crews who worked deep into the night.
Buildings lay in rubble, bridges and highway overpasses were toppled
and roads buckled like rumpled paper. Mangled cars were strewn on
highways, many of them resting on their roofs.
Chilean television showed buildings in ruins in Concepcion. Whole sides
of buildings were sheared off, and at least two structures were
engulfed in flames. Emergency teams rescued 30 people from one
collapsed building in Concepcion.
Bachelet declared areas of catastrophe, similar to a state of
emergency, which will allow her to rush in aid. She noted that two of
the nation's largest hospitals had suffered structural damage and
patients were taken to other facilities.
Other public institutions also were affected.
"There were reports of riots at one of the jails," Bachelet said. "The
jails have, of course, received significant damage... We are looking
into possibly moving some of these inmates."
Two airlines, LAN and Cencosud, announced they were temporarily
suspending services.
The European Union offered $4 million in assistance and several
international humanitarian groups pledged help for Chile's relief
effort.
In a televised address Saturday, President Obama said that the United
States has resources ready if Chile requests help.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she will proceed Sunday with
her planned trip to five Latin American countries, including Chile.
CNN's Rolando Santos, Brian Byrnes and Patty Lane contributed to this
report.