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US Agency Cancels Tsunami Threat After 7.2 Earthquake in Philippines

A major 7.2 magnitude earthquake has hit off south Philippines, the US Geological Survey reported. Hazardous tsunami waves reported possible in Philippines and Indonesia.
Sputnik

The US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) has cancelled a tsunami threat it issued earlier on 29 December following a large earthquake near the Philippines' southern island of Mindanao.

​The United States Geological Survey reported earlier that a major 7.2-magnitude earthquake had struck off south of the Philippines on Saturday. The large earthquake struck off the coast of the Philippines' southern Mindanao island, the US Geological Survey added.

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The quake was registered at 03:39 GMT, 101 kilometres (62.7 miles) to the southeast of the Pundaguitan coastal area, according to the agency's data.

The focus of the earthquake was located at the depth of 49 kilometres. There have been no immediate reports on casualties or damage caused by the quake.

The Pacific Warning Center announced that a tsunami threat exists for parts of the Pacific after the earthquake.

"A tsunami threat exists for parts of the Pacific located closer to the earthquake. However… based on all available data… there is no tsunami threat to Hawaii," the statement read.

READ MORE: Strong 6.0-Magnitude Earthquake Rocks Philippines

Earthquakes with magnitude above 7.0 Richter scale are considered major earthquakes. Such an earthquake usually causes damage to most buildings, doing severe damage to many of them. The severe damage is usually limited to 250 kilometres (155.343 miles) from the quake's epicentre. Major earthquakes usually felt across great distances.

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