The Sixth Most Violent Earthquake in History in the Peninsula Between Ice and Volcanoes
8 Articles
8 Articles
The Kamchatka is located in the "fire belt." Limited consequences only because almost uninhabited
The Kremlin said this Wednesday, July 30, that there have been no casualties from the 8.8 magnitude earthquake that struck the Kamchatka peninsula in the eastern tip of Russia, one of the most powerful in the country since 1952.
There is another earthquake with epicenter in the same Russian peninsula between the biggest we always are, but the strongest events took place in Chile and the United States, while the most deadly tsunami occurred in China.
On the morning of July 30, an 8.8-magnitude earthquake occurred in the Kamchatka Peninsula (Russia), recorded as the sixth strongest earthquake in history.
The earth in front of the Russian peninsula Kamchatka continues trembling. During the night on Thursday numerous aftershocks were recorded.
It was the heaviest quake in more than 70 years before Kamchatka. Now follows a volcanic eruption on the Far Eastern peninsula.
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