A strong earthquake of 6.9 magnitude struck off the west coast of Chile on Monday, rocking the capital Santiago and briefly causing alarm along the Pacific Coast but sparing the quake-prone nation of any serious damage.
The quake was centred about 137km from Santiago, and some 35km west of the coastal city of Valparaiso.
The US Geological Survey twice revised the magnitude before settling on 6.9, a strength usually capable of causing severe damage.
The epicentre’s shallow depth of 25km below the sea allowed it to be felt hundreds of kilometres away.
Santiago office buildings swayed for about 30 seconds at the end of the workday.
Closer to the epicentre, residents scrambled for higher ground, remembering the lessons of the country’s devastating earthquake and tsunami in 2010.
“It was short but very powerful,” said Paloma Salamo, a 26-year-old nurse, who was in a clinic in Vina del Mar, just north of Valparaiso, when the quake struck.
People ran from the facility carrying children and some headed for the hills when the tsunami alarm sounded, she said, but calm was soon restored.
“So far there has been no human loss nor significant damage,” President Michelle Bachelet said, praising people for evacuating in an orderly fashion in the immediate aftermath.
Officials cancelled a tsunami warning that had been issued in Valparaiso.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre reported small tsunami waves of half a foot.There were no reports of structural damage in Valparaiso, but cellphone networks were down in some places, a spokesman with the local government said.
Videos from the Valparaiso area showed objects falling from store shelves, rocks falling onto roads and lights flickering.
The quake was felt as far away as Argentina, on the other side of the Andes.


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