7.7 earthquake triggers tsunami warning in Chile
An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 7.7 off the coast of Chile has prompted a tsunami warning, informs BBC.
The quake struck 225 km south-west of Puerto Montt in southern Chile at 14:22 GMT, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) said.
Its depth was about 15km. There are no details yet of damage.
Chile's national emergency office has issued an alert and ordered the evacuation of coastal areas of Los Lagos region.
"As a measure of precaution, we order the evacuation of coastal areas of Biobio, Araucania, Los Rios, Aysen," the alert said.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said hazardous waves were possible on coasts located up to 1,000km from the quake's epicentre.
Residents of Quellon, a town shaken by the quake, were among those heading to safe areas, according to local media.
"I've lived for 10 years in the south and never felt something like that," a resident who was leaving his house said.
International
- Red alert pollution declared in Beijing and other 21 Chinese cities
- Magnitude 8.0 quake hits Papua New Guinea, tsunami warning issued
- Thousands wait to be evacuated from Aleppo as new deal reached
- Hopes raised that evacuation could soon resume in Aleppo
- Buses attacked, burned on way to evacuate Syrian villages
- Thousands flee as Christmas Day typhoon barrels down Philippines