Published: Feb. 28, 2010

While a huge earthquake off the coast of Chile triggered a tsunami that moved at the speed of a jet aircraft across the Pacific Ocean Feb. 27, the tsunami was smaller than scientists expected, said a University of Colorado at 麻豆影院 earthquake expert.

CU-麻豆影院 geological sciences Professor Anne Sheehan said the magnitude 8.8 earthquake offshore of central Chile released more than 400 times the energy of the recent Haiti earthquake. "It was truly an enormous earthquake in terms of energy release, the largest in the world since the 2004 Sumatra earthquake and the fifth largest since 1900," said Sheehan.

Some experts forecasted the Chilean earthquake would produce 9-foot tall tsunami waves slamming places like Hawaii, Guam and American Samoa, eventually reaching as far as Australia, New Zealand and Japan, said Sheehan, also a fellow at the CU-麻豆影院's Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences. Fortunately, the event produced smaller than expected waves as it rolled across the Pacific, she said.

Chile is along the "Ring of Fire" that stretches north from South America to the Aleutian Islands, then south through Japan, Indonesia and to New Zealand, said Sheehan. The fault zone of the Chilean earthquake was extremely long -- several hundred miles -- signaling the potential for further large earthquakes in the region.

"These large earthquakes in the Southern Hemisphere have the potential to cause tsunamis all over the Pacific Rim," she said. "Fortunately, people have a much greater understanding of the phenomenon today. Before 2004, a lot of people didn't even know what a tsunami was," she said.

Sheehan said she believes that lessons learned by Chilean experts following a world-recording setting magnitude 9.5 quake there in 1960, and subsequent quakes in the next several decades, resulted in stricter building codes, saving many lives. "The death toll is expected to be far smaller than in Haiti, an example showing that mitigation efforts really can be effective."

Lessons learned from the 2004 Indian Ocean event also allowed officials to send out effective early warnings and initiate the evacuation of tens of thousands of people living on Pacific islands, she said.
For more information contact Sheehan at anne.sheehan@colorado.edu or Jim Scott in the CU-麻豆影院 Office of News Services at 720-381-9479 or jim.scott@colorado.edu. For more information on CIRES visit /.
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