7.5-magnitude earthquake hits Drake Passage off South America
Briefly

A preliminary magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck the Drake Passage in the South Atlantic at 11:16 p.m. local time, about 710 kilometers southeast of Ushuaia, Argentina. The quake had a preliminary depth of 10.8 kilometers. Chilean authorities issued an advisory for a potential tsunami along parts of Antarctica. No evacuation orders were immediately declared for Chile or Argentina. The Drake Passage links the South Atlantic and South Pacific between South America’s southern tip and the Antarctic Peninsula. The area is remote, with no immediate reports of damage or casualties, and lies within a highly active seismic and geological zone.
A major, preliminary magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck in the South Atlantic Ocean late Thursday, the United States Geological Survey reported, prompting Chilean authorities to issue an advisory for a potential tsunami along parts of Antarctica. There were no evacuation orders immediately declared for Chile or Argentina, the two countries closest to the quake. The temblor happened at 11:16 p.m. local time in Argentina about 710 kilometers (441 miles) southeast of Ushuaia, Argentina, in the Drake Passage, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
The earthquake had a preliminary depth of 10.8 kilometers (6.7 miles). The Drake Passage connects the South Atlantic and South Pacific oceans between the southern tip of South America and the Antarctic Peninsula. Though less quake-prone than other stretches of Chile's coast, the Drake Passage straddles a highly active seismic and geological zone. The area is very remote and there were no immediate reports of damage or casualties.
Read at ABC7 Los Angeles
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