Earthquake in Alaska: Quake of Magnitude 6.9 Strikes Alaskan Peninsula, No Tsunami Warning Issued

Perryville, August 14: A 6.9 earthquake struck off the coast of the Alaskan Peninsula early Saturday morning, the US Geological Survey reported. Despite the size of the quake, no tsunami warnings were issued.

The closest place to the epicenter was Perryville, home to a little more than 100 people 85 miles (135 kilometers) northwest. Much of the land around the part of the Gulf of Alaska where the earthquake struck just before 4 a.m. is home to wildlife refuges. Earthquake in Haiti: Quake of Magnitude 7.2 Hits Various Part of the Country; PM Ariel Henr Says ‘Lives Lost’.

Alaska is a hotbed of seismic activity. The Alaska Earthquake Center, housed at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, detects an earthquake every 15 minutes, on average, according to its website. The center also says that 75 per cent of all US earthquakes with a magnitude over 5 occur in Alaska.

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, Today News 24 Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

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