Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Mayor Hopes 6.1 Magnitude Tremor Will Relieve Pressure For Mega-quake

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2015 04:23 AM
    QUEEN CHARLOTTE CITY, B.C. — The mayor of the community closest to a strong earthquake that struck British Columbia's north coast on Friday welcomes the tremor in hopes it will relieve building pressure.
     
    The 6.1 magnitude earthquake hit approximately 167 km southeast of the Village of Queen Charlotte in the Haida Gwaii region at about 7 a.m.
     
    No damage or injuries were immediately reported. The National Tsunami Warning Centre said a tsunami was not expected to result from the quake, which struck about 10 km under the surface.
     
    Queen Charlotte City Mayor Greg Martin woke up to the quake, which shook his bed and rattled his door, but said the trembling was minor.
     
    "We're quite used to earthquakes here, and frankly, it's a bit of a relief," he said.
     
    "When we get little ones we think that the pressure is being released and hopefully not building up to the 'big one.'"
     
    He added that the city is built on a rock foundation and residents there don't feel the extreme movement that other Haida Gwaii communities often feel in a quake.
     
    Martin said the quake is a good reminder that the city must be ready for an imminent future disaster, although emergency preparedness measures are already in place.
     
    Experts have said the Pacific archipelago of Haida Gwaii is the likely location of a future large quake and tsunami, with increased pressure immediately south of the islands along the Queen Charlotte Fault.
     
    The 7.7 magnitude earthquake that hit Haida Gwaii in October 2012 was the second-largest quake measured in Canadian history.
     
    Billy Yovanovich, the chief councillor of Skidegate Band Council — a Haida community located about 8 km from Queen Charlotte City — was also woken Friday to his house shaking, but said it only lasted for seconds.
     
    "I was just waking up and my dog, actually, I think heard it coming, and she started shuffling around," he said.
     
    He has previously felt gusty winds rattle his house just like Friday's quake. While this most recent tremor felt small, the community is still on edge after the massive quake three years ago, he said.
     
    "A lot of people are still quite anxious, still traumatized, over that major one," he said. "It really throws people off even with these smaller ones."
     
    The Skidegate community has an emergency preparedness team that has developed tsunami routes and other emergency responses, Yovanovich said.
     
    Earthquakes between a 6.0 and 6.9 are considered strong tremors on the Richter scale.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two People Plead Guilty In Halifax To Murder In Death Of Loretta Saunders

    Two People Plead Guilty In Halifax To Murder In Death Of Loretta Saunders
    Blake Leggette pleaded guilty today in the province's Supreme Court to first-degree murder and will be sentenced to an automatic life sentence with no parole eligibility for 25 years.

    Two People Plead Guilty In Halifax To Murder In Death Of Loretta Saunders

    Search Underway After Man Goes Into Water At Nova Scotia's Peggy's Cove

    Search Underway After Man Goes Into Water At Nova Scotia's Peggy's Cove
    PEGGYS COVE, N.S. — The RCMP in Nova Scotia say a search is underway for a 25-year-old man who was swept into the Atlantic Ocean from the rocky edges of Peggy's Cove.

    Search Underway After Man Goes Into Water At Nova Scotia's Peggy's Cove

    Mohamed Fahmy Feels 'a Little Better' With Temporary Canadian Passport In Hand

    Mohamed Fahmy Feels 'a Little Better' With Temporary Canadian Passport In Hand
    The Canadian journalist facing broadly denounced terror charges in Egypt was finally handed a temporary Canadian passport on Wednesday.

    Mohamed Fahmy Feels 'a Little Better' With Temporary Canadian Passport In Hand

    Libyan Students In Canada Cut Off From Scholarship Funding To Remain In School

    HALIFAX — When Albahlool Omar Idhbeaa came from Libya to Nova Scotia to complete his doctorate, he came with the understanding that his home country would cover his tuition and the cost of supporting his family.

    Libyan Students In Canada Cut Off From Scholarship Funding To Remain In School

    B.C. Gives $70,000 To 91-Year-Old California Woman Bilked By Vancouver Lottery Scammers

    B.C. Gives $70,000 To 91-Year-Old California Woman Bilked By Vancouver Lottery Scammers
    The Justice Ministry and the Vancouver Police Department seized a commercial building they say was the headquarters of an alleged ring of international fraudsters.

    B.C. Gives $70,000 To 91-Year-Old California Woman Bilked By Vancouver Lottery Scammers

    Calgary Man Gets 27 Months In Prison For 18-Year-Old's Death On B.C. Lake

    Calgary Man Gets 27 Months In Prison For 18-Year-Old's Death On B.C. Lake
    PENTICTON, B.C. — A Calgary boater has been sentenced to 27 months in prison for the death of an 18-year-old man he refused to help after hitting him on B.C. lake.

    Calgary Man Gets 27 Months In Prison For 18-Year-Old's Death On B.C. Lake