Print This Page Email This Page
Four Quakes Jolt N, NW China in 1 Day

A 5.4-magnitude earthquake jolted northwest China's Qinghai Province at 10:15 PM on Tuesday, according to the China Earthquake Network Center.

The quake struck the Tanggula Range within the Haixi Prefecture of Qinghai, with the epicenter at 33.2 degrees north latitude and 92.0 degrees east longitude, the center said.

Earlier on Tuesday, the region had been struck by two other tremors with similar magnitude.

A 5.1-magnitude earthquake hit at 7:04 PM and a 5.5-magnitude one hit at 6:04 PM.

Casualties and damages are not immediately available.

However, according to the center, the affected area is sparsely populated as it is on an altitude of about 5,000 meters above sea level.

The China Earthquake Administrative said in a late night press release it had beefed up the quake surveillance in the affected and neighboring areas following instructions of Vice Premier Hui Liangyu.

The administration would closely follow the development of the situation, organize experts to have more consultations and study the trend of the quake development, it said.

Emergency response work in the affected area would also be stepped up, it said.

Approximately the same area had been rocked by another moderate quake a day earlier.

The 5.0-magnitude tremor hit at 1:56 a.m. Monday, with the epicenter at 33.2 degrees north latitude and 92.2 degrees east longitude. No casualties were reported.

A five-member working team from the Qinghai provincial earthquake bureau left at 9:00 PM on Tuesday and was hurrying to the quake area, the release said.

They would later be joined in Golmud City by employees from the Qinghai-Tibet Railways Company, soldiers, and government officials from the city. Together the group would go to the epicenter to carry out on-spot work, it said.

According to experts, the area has been hit by quake clusters many times in history, and the tremors in the past two days were also quake clusters.

Possibility could not be ruled out that quakes of similar magnitude might strike again in the next few days, experts said.

Also on Tuesday, a 5.2-magnitude quake rocked the north Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region at 2:05 PM.

The epicenter was located along the border between Oroqen Banner and Arong Banner at 49.0 degrees north latitude and 122.5 degrees east longitude, the network said.

The epicenter was inside a forest and there were no reports of casualties so far, said the Inner Mongolia regional earthquake bureau.

China has detected in southwestern Sichuan Province a total of 11,380 aftershocks of the May 12 8.0-magnitude earthquake, which has killed 69,146 people and led to the missing of 17,516 others.

In the 24 hours ending Tuesday noon, 186 aftershocks were monitored in the quake zone, according to the China Earthquake Administration.

One of the tremors measured between 5.0-5.9 and all the others measured at or below 3.9 magnitude, the administration said.

(Xinhua News Agency June 11, 2008)


Related Stories
- Moderate Quake Jolts Qinghai in NW China
- Magnitude 5.0 Earthquake Hits Qinghai
- Qinghai-Tibet Railway Unaffected by Earthquakes

Print This Page Email This Page
Developing Country Growth Resilient in Face of Financial Turmoil
Chemical Spillage Leads to Water Peril
Official: Economic Growth Probably to Slow down
One Panda Confirmed Dead in Massive Earthquake
Missing Helicopter Found Near Quake Epicenter
Main Quake Lake Expected to Shrink as Drainage Speeds up


Product Directory
China Search
Country Search
Hot Buys