At 5:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 16 Akron time, Cathy added this Facebook post:
Follow NZ quakes on geonet.org.nz, but only moderate ones overnight. Amazing that Wellington's 6.2 quake and myriad of 5.5s yesterday caused disruptions, but no one hurt and minimal structure damage. The city is built for earthquakes!
Former Beacon Journal State Desk reporter Cathy Robinson Strong (in 1970s) is dealing with a 6.5-magnitude earthquake that today struck New Zealand, where she lives.
The epicenter was near the northern tip of the South
Island, 14 miles south of the town of Blenheim. Cathy lives near and works in Wellington,
which is on the southern tip of the North Island, so the quake has to
cross a relatively short distance of water to shake, rattle and roll Cathy’s
house on Te Horo Beach, which is about an hour north of Wellington, where Cathy
is on the Massey University’s Wellington Journalism School faculty.
New Zealand consists of two large islands, the North Island and the South Island.
Says Cathy on her Facebook page: “Ok I will
keep quiet till the house falls down. I just felt three more quakes -- 5.5,
5.7, 5.5. The house is rolling constantly. I should have stayed in Wash. DC.”
Cathy just returned from a visit to Washington.
Occupants had to be freed from elevators that
stopped operating in Wellington.
New Zealand sits at the
southwestern edge of the Pacific "ring of fire," an area of high
seismic and volcanic activity that stretches up through Japan, across to Alaska
and down the west coasts of North and South America.
In February 2011, a
6.3-magnitude earthquake toppled buildings in the South Island city of
Christchurch, killing 185 people and injuring several thousand.
Two years later, BJ newsroom retiree
John Olesky, 1970s State Desk reporter Paula Stone Tucker and retired BJ
photographer Don Roese saw damage still visible during their March 2013 visits to New Zealand and Cathy.
St. Mary’s Cathedral in Christchurch remains
uninhabitable. Businesses are operating out of cargo containers.
To read CNN’s report on
the New Zealand earthquake, click on http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/15/world/asia/new-zealand-quake
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