2009 Costa Rica earthquake
Date | January 8, 2009 |
---|---|
Origin time | 19:21:35 UTC [1] |
Magnitude | 6.1 Mw [1] |
Depth | 12.5 km (7.8 mi) [1] |
Epicenter | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. [1] |
Type | Oblique-slip [2] |
Areas affected | Costa Rica |
Max. intensity | VII (Very Strong) [2] |
Casualties | 34 dead, 91 injured,[3] 64 missing[4] |
The 2009 Costa Rica earthquake (also known as Cinchona earthquake) occurred at 1:21:35 pm local time on January 8 with a moment magnitude of 6.1 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VII (Very Strong). The shock took place in northern Costa Rica, 30 kilometres (19 mi) north-northwest of San José and was felt throughout Costa Rica and in southern central Nicaragua.
Contents
Damage
The earthquake took at least 34 lives,[4] including at least three children, left about 64 people missing,[4] and injured at least 91.[3] Hundreds of people were trapped and two villages were cut off.[5] Most of the victims died when a landslide occurred near the La Paz waterfall by the Poás Volcano, and 452 people including 369 tourists were evacuated from the area in helicopters.[6] 1,244 people were displaced in the immediate aftermath.[4][7] In addition, a hotel, houses, roads, and vehicles were damaged, and several bridges were also destroyed.[6] The town of Cinchona was heavily hit, and all of the buildings there were heavily damaged.[8] Power was temporarily disrupted in San José.[2]
Aftermath
The Costa Rican Red Cross sent at least 400 people to assist in the recovery.[7] The agency said, "Some 42 communities were affected and sustained serious impacts on civil and electrical infrastructure... [They] are going to need a lot of help."[7] Four helicopters were also dispatched in order to help aid efforts.[7] The Comisión Nacional de Emergencias (National Emergency Commission) requested private helicopters to help with the aid.[9] Additionally, the United States and Colombia dispatched helicopters with aid to assist with the relief and recovery efforts.[10]
About 2,000 aftershocks were felt throughout Costa Rica.[4]
On January 12, President Oscar Arias declared a five-day period of national grieving out of respect for the victims, and asked the organizers of the Fiestas de Palmares to postpone them.
On January 13, the Banco de Costa Rica announced that it would offer home financing credit to homeowners who want to rebuild or fix their home.[11]
See also
Wikinews has related news: Strongest earthquake in 150 years hits Costa Rica |
References
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- ↑ [1]
- ↑ Garnica, Vanessa I. "Costa Rica, Nicaragua Daily News." Costa Rica Newspaper, The Tico Times, News, Costa Rica Real Estate, Travel – Costa Rica News, Costa Rica Earthquake. 13 Jan. 2009. <http://www.ticotimes.net/dailyarchive/2009_01/0115092.htm>.