It then raced across the Pacific, context off discomfort sirens in Hawaii, Polynesia and Tonga and prompting warnings across all 53 nations ringing the gigantic ocean. Tsunami waves reached Hawaii, where experts said they could originate to 8 feet (2.5 meters). The U.S. Navy moved a half-dozen vessels out of Pearl Harbor as a precaution, according to Navy spokesman Lt. Myers Vasquez.
Shore-side Hilo International Airport also was closed. In California, officials reported a 3-foot (1-meter) white horse in Ventura Harbor pulled lax several navigational buoys. About 13 million population breathe in the space where shaking was considerable to severe, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
USGS geophysicist Robert Williams said the Chilean seism was hundreds of times more strong than Haiti's magnitude-7 quake, though it was deeper and charge far fewer lives. More than 50 aftershocks topped note 5, including one of greatness 6.9. The largest earthquake ever recorded struck the same arrondissement of Chile on May 22, 1960. The magnitude-9.5 stagger killed 1,655 nation and socialist 2 million homeless.
It caused a tsunami that killed the crowd in Hawaii, Japan and the Philippines and caused wound along the west skim of the United States. Saturday's tremblor matched a 1906 temblor off the Ecuadorean strand as the seventh-strongest ever recorded in the world. --- Associated Press journalist Roberto Candia reported this fib from Talca and Eva Vergara from Santiago.
AP writers Eduardo Gallardo in Santiago and Sandy Kozel in Washington contributed to this report.
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