M 4.8 in Antarctica on 03 Nov 2020 15:02 UTC

Media coverage of this event

Articles: 2
Articles about casualties: 2 (100%)
Articles in last hour: 0

News articles per day

Social media analysis

The information below is extracted by an experimental JRC system to analyze Twitter messages for the occurance of secondary effects for earthquakes and tsunamis. This feature is currently not available for other disaser types.

[beta] Media disaster_tweets analysis

The information below is extracted by an experimental JRC system to analyze Twitter based on specific events and keywords


All headlines on this Alert

The headlines below have been automatically extracted by the Europe Media Monitor.

There are no victims of the earthquake in Turkey among the Ossetian Diaspora

Tue, 03 Nov 2020 11:24:00 +0100cominf (en)

There are no representatives of the Ossetian diaspora among the victims of the earthquake in Turkey, Ramzi Kanukov, the authorized representative of South Ossetia in Turkey, told IA "Res". “The earthquake was strong; the city of Izmir was badly damaged.

Countries grieve with Turkey after deadly quake

Tue, 03 Nov 2020 07:44:00 +0100yenisafak-en (en)

Many countries including Mauritania and Hungary offered on Monday condolences to Turkey over the Oct. 30 devastating earthquake in the Aegean region. The magnitude 6.6 earthquake hit Izmir, Turkey's third-largest city, killing at least 91 people and leaving nearly 1,000 injured.

South Island's West Coast shaken by earthquake overnight The quake hit 50km south of Hokitika. 11 minutes ago

Mon, 02 Nov 2020 22:05:00 +0100newshub (en)

The South Island's West Coast was rattled by a 4.6 magnitude earthquake overnight. GeoNet says the quake hit 50km south of Hokitika at 10:10pm on Monday at a depth of 5km. More than 450 people reported feeling the shake, with most saying it was moderate, light, or weak and three saying it was strong.

Tsunamis en el Ártico: la nueva y peligrosa amenaza del cambio climático

Mon, 02 Nov 2020 18:05:00 +0100eluniverso (es)

Millones de toneladas de roca pueden deslizarse hasta el océano por el derretimiento del permafrost. Barry Arm es una estrecha brecha de costa en el sur de Alaska. No es muy grande si se la compara con el extenso borde de Norteamérica que colinda con el océano Pacífico, pero el lugar provoca una particular preocupación.

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