New Zealand and Australia cancelled tsunami warnings on Wednesday after an earthquake struck the South of New Zealand, causing minor damage but no injuries.
Australia’s weather bureau said a small tsunami had been recorded in New Zealand and another was detected in the Tasman Sea heading towards Australia’s South East coast.
”Our deep ocean buoy in the Southern Tasman Sea indicates a wave travelling across the Tasman. Because of the depth of the water, we can not tell the wave height,” Chris Ryan, from Australia’s Tsunami Warning Centre, told Reuters.
Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology issued a statement advising people in low-lying coastal areas to move to higher ground and for people to get out of the water.
Australia cancelled its tsunami warning after an hour, downgrading the threat to a ”small boat alert”. New Zealand also cancelled its tsunami warning.
The Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences said the tremor, measuring 6.6 magnitude, struck at 9.22 pm (0922 GMT). The government institute said it was centred in the remote and unpopulated Fiordland region, about 150 km North West of the country’s most southern city, Invercargill. It was measured at around 5km below ground level.
Local civil defence officials had issued a warning about a ”potential tsunami” for the region, because of conflicting reports about the quake’s size. The Japanese meteorological agency put the preliminary magnitude at 7.8.
”There was a small wave, but it was not damage-causing … people probably wouldn’t have noticed it among the other waves,” Civil Defence spokesperson Vince Cholewa told Reuters.
Local media said the quake was felt widely throughout the lower South Island as a long, rolling motion, sending goods falling from shop shelves, but said no injuries were reported.
”It was quite a large motion, the whole house was moving, the door was moving in the door frame, and the fence posts were moving,” Invercargill resident, Simon Wilson, told Radio New Zealand.
The region, famed for its natural beauty of high mountains, wilderness and deep fiords or inlets, is known for strong earthquake activity. New Zealand records around 14 000 earthquakes a year. — Reuters