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Russia earthquake: Tsunami warning after 6.6-magnitude quake strikes in far eastern Kamchatka region

Shallow tremors strike just 22.8km below Earth's surface

Jon Sharman
Wednesday 29 March 2017 02:18 EDT
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An earthquake struck in Russia's Kamchatka region
An earthquake struck in Russia's Kamchatka region (US Geological Survey)

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A powerful 6.6-magnitude earthquake has stuck off Russia's eastern coast, at the Kamchatka peninsula.

Russian monitoring centres told the TASS news agency tsunamis of about 1.5m were possible, according to RT, though the site said Russia's emergencies ministry later stood down the warning.

The earthquake struck at a depth of 22.8km just after 4am UK time, according to the US Geological Survey.

The United States' tsunami warning centres were not showing a risk of waves to US territories.

The largest city in the area is Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, with a population of some 187,000, the USGS said.

The Kamchatka region lies near a subduction zone, where the Pacific plate slides underneath the North American.

Seismographers from the Petropavlovsk tsunami centre declared the original threat based on earthquake data, a spokesman told RT.

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