A shakemap released by the US Geological Survey (USGS) on Thursday shows the epicenter (marked with a star) of a 7.7 magnitude earthquake that was detected off the coast of the Solomon Islands, east of Papua New Guinea, at 17:38:47 UTC in a depth of 48.7km. - EPA/VNA Photo |
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre initially said there could be possible "widespread, hazardous" tsunami waves, forcing villagers to flee to higher ground.
But within three hours the warning was downgraded after the threat passed without major incident.
The epicentre of the quake, which hit at 4:38am, was located 68km west of Kirakira, a provincial capital in the Solomon Islands, at a depth of 48km, the US Geological Survey (USGS) said.
A shallow 6.5 aftershock rattled the same area some four hours later.
Electricity supplies were cut in some parts of the Solomons and there were reports of thatched houses collapsing.
Donald Tehimae, an officer at the Kirakira police station, said most of the damage appeared to be superficial.
"Some houses have been damaged but no one was hurt. At the police station a lot of documents in the storeroom fell down," he said.
Suzy Sainovski, an official with aid organisation World Vision in the capital
"The earthquake woke me up. I was in bed and it was dark and it felt like being in a matchbox that someone was just shaking and shaking," she said.
"It felt almost like the hotel’s foundation was just moving in waves. The shaking felt like it went on for quite a while -- 30 to 45 seconds. The cupboard doors were shaking, but nothing fell over.
"Just from briefly looking outside my window as it begins to get light, I didn’t see any damage to buildings."
Offshore epicentre
Hugh Glanville, duty seismologist at Geoscience
"So far we have had no reports of major damage," he said.
"There was a small tsunami, the waves were under half a metre. They’ve arrived through most of the Solomons and
"The reason we often get so little damage from big earthquakes in this area is that the plate boundary is offshore," he added.
"The epicentre being 100km offshore makes all the difference."
USGS said earlier that some casualties and damage were possible from the quake, warning that waves reaching 1-3m above tide level could occur along parts of the Solomons.
It had also warned some coasts in
The earthquake-prone Solomon Islands, east of Papua New Guinea and with a population of more than 500,000, are well rehearsed in what action to take following several devastating tremors. - AFP