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6.3 quake hits Papua New Guinea
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Oct 18, 2011

A 6.3-magnitude earthquake rocked Papua New Guinea's remote New Britain region on Tuesday, but was unlikely to cause a tsunami, Australian seismologists said.

The US Geological Survey said the quake occurred at a depth of 10 kilometres (6 miles), about 163 kilometres east-northeast of Kandrian, New Britain and some 576 kilometres from the capital Port Moresby.

Geoscience Australia, which also measured the tremor at 6.3-magnitude, said the quake was close to the coastline.

"People living in that local area would have gotten a fairly strong shake," seismologist David Jepsen told AFP, adding that some vulnerable structures could have been damaged by the tremor.

"I don't think there would be a (local) tsunami," he added.

Jepsen said quakes of such magnitude were common in the New Britain region of Papua New Guinea, which sits on the so-called "Pacific Ring of Fire", a hotspot for seismic activity due to friction between tectonic plates.

A 6.7-magnitude jolt hit the country on Friday but there were no reports of damage in the impoverished Pacific island state.

A giant tsunami in 1998, caused by an undersea earthquake or a landslide, killed more than 2,000 people near Aitape, on the country's northwest coast.

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Earthquakes generate big heat in super-small areas
Providence RI (SPX) Oct 18, 2011
Most earthquakes that are seen, heard, and felt around the world are caused by fast slip on faults. While the earthquake rupture itself can travel on a fault as fast as the speed of sound or better, the fault surfaces behind the rupture are sliding against each other at about a meter per second. But the mechanics that underlie fast slip during earthquakes have eluded scientists, because it ... read more


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