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Tsunami alert declared for southern Thailand


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Tsunami alert declared for southern Thailand

 

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Image: Thai Rath

 

A tsunami alert has been declared for six southern Thai provinces following two earthquakes in the Indian Ocean.

 

Thailand's Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation issued the alert on Saturday night for the provinces of Ranong, Phuket, Phang Nga, Krabi, Trang and Satun.

 

According to the US Geological Survey, two tremors with the 5.0 and 5.2 magnitude occurred near the Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean at 6:29 p.m. and 6:34 p.m local time.

 

The tremors took place approximately 634 kilometres from Phuket, the alert said. 

 

Officials have been ordered to closely monitor the situation over the next 24 hours. 

 

The alert gave the following contact details for the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation:

 

Email: [email protected]


Phone: 0-2399-4114 

 

Source: Thai Rath

 

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-- © Copyright Thai Visa News 2019-03-24

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Mag 5.0 and 5.2. They are idiots with no idea what they are talking about.

They clearly don't teach about logarithmic scale measurements in the Thai education system

 

If they did they would realise that a 5 to 5.2 releases about 1/1,000,000th of the energy of the 2004 mag 9.1.

Edited by Reigntax
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1 hour ago, Reigntax said:

Mag 5.0 and 5.2. They are idiots with no idea what they are talking about.

They clearly don't teach about logarithmic scale measurements in the Thai education system

 

If they did they would realise that a 5 to 5.2 releases about 1/1,000,000th of the energy of the 2004 mag 9.1.

They study logarithms in grade 11 (M 5.), but obviously not taught that  5 to 5.2 quake would cause barely a ripple, if anything. I wouldn't expect students to know that, but certainly, the so-called experts should. 

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1 hour ago, TEFLKrabi said:

I thought it was down to displacement rather rather the magnitude?

A combination I would think. Sometimes the experts struggle to explain Tsunamis. The one in Indonesia was definitely a combination and more local, the tragic one in 2004 was of far higher magnitude and affected many countries.

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