October 26, 2012 – ICELAND - Icelandic
authorities warned people in the north of the island on Thursday to prepare for
a possible big earthquake after the biggest tremors in the area for 20 years.
The north Atlantic island, where almost 320,000 people live, is a hotspot of
volcanic and seismic activity as it straddles a fault in the earth’s surface.
The Civil Protection Department said in a statement that recent small quakes in
an area under the sea about 20 km (12 miles) off the north of Iceland had
prompted it to issue a warning to local people. It said such shocks, one of
which was a magnitude 5.6, often led to stronger quakes. Warnings were issued
when there were grounds to expect a natural or manmade event that could
threaten health and human safety, it added. “People are anxious because they
don’t know what might happen,” said Amundi Gunnarsson, chief of the fire
brigade in Fjallabyggd, one of the small towns in the area, and a member of the
Civil Protection Department. “At the same time, life goes on as usual. People
are going to work and children are going to school, but everyone is on alert,”
he told Reuters by telephone. The coastal area in the north is home to
several small towns and a population of several thousand people. The biggest
town in the north of Iceland, Akureyri, has a population of about 17,000
people, and lies roughly 100 km south of the seismic activity. Geologist
Benedikt Ofeigsson said houses in Iceland could typically withstand quakes of a
magnitude about 7. “Of course there could be some damage to in walls and concrete
in such strong earthquakes, but what is important that houses have stood firm,”
he told Reuters.
Be aware!!!
ReplyDeleteThen we have to stay alert!!
ReplyDeletenever had a day there are so many earthquakes
ReplyDelete