Disaster 8.7 magnitude earthquake near Russia prompts tsunami alerts in Hawaii, Alaska and West Coast - The earthquake occurred about 85 miles off the east coast of Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula with a depth of nearly 12 miles, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

A massive magnitude 8.7 earthquake struck off the coast of Russia Tuesday, sparking tsunami warnings in Alaska and Hawaii and alerts for other areas of the West Coast.

The earthquake occurred about 85 miles off the east coast of Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula with a depth of nearly 12 miles, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Magnitude 6.3 and 6.9 aftershocks were also reported in the area, according to USGS.

A tsunami warning was announced for Alaska's Aleutian Islands and Hawaii. California, Oregon and Washington are under a tsunami watch, as well as the U.S. territory of Guam, while the threat is being evaluated.

The first tsunami wave is forecast to reach Hawaii just after 7:15 p.m. local time. Destructive tsunami waves are expected, according to Oahu Emergency Management.

Sources told ABC News the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency has activated its Emergency Operations Center. Officials have also proactively activated their Joint Information Center and are meeting with Hawaii Gov. Josh Green's team.

Sirens are currently going off on all Hawaii islands as a part of their statewide warning system, ten minutes after the hour for the next three hours to warn people.

People are urged to evacuate coastal areas, according to officials. All shores of the island are at risk because tsunami waves wrap around islands, according to the National Weather Service.

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An 8.7 magnitude earthquake near Russia prompts tsunami alerts along the West Coast, Alaska and Hawaii.
NOAA


"The danger can continue for many hours after the initial wave as subsequent waves arrive. Tsunami heights cannot be predicted and the first wave may not be the largest," the NWS said in an alert.

An advisory was also issued for Japan's Pacific Coast regions from Hokkaido to Kyushu.

Japan's meteorological agency warned that a tsunami about 1 meter (3 feet) high is expected to reach Hokkaido in the north around 10:00 a.m., local time, with waves arriving later in the day along parts of eastern Honshu and Kyushu in the south.

People are warned to stay away from the coast and river mouths and not to approach the water to observe.

A tsunami warning means that a tsunami that could cause widespread, dangerous flooding and powerful currents is expected. A tsunami watch means a distant earthquake has occurred and a tsunami is possible.

ABC News' Bonnie Mclean, William Gretsky, Anthony Trotter and Mireya Villarreal contributed to this report.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.


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Pineapples don't grow on trees, bro. But I'll take a fresh pineapple, too. Honestly, having been to Hawaii where I tried their fresh pineapple, it was amazing. You can only get that type of flavor in America from tropical fruits grown in places like South Florida.
Hmm, I'm obviously not from around the tropics. Climb the tallest pine tree around, I like climbing Eastern White Pine myself. Do those grow in Hawaii???

Pineapples don't grow on trees, bro. But I'll take a fresh pineapple, too. Honestly, having been to Hawaii where I tried their fresh pineapple, it was amazing. You can only get that type of flavor in America from tropical fruits grown in places like South Florida.
I hear they still grow the original banana (the one that made them popular but that got replaced due to monocropping and some bacteria or something.) They still grow but can't be grown at scale because of this fungus/bacteria/disease so now we have the cavandish banana instead. I guess the original tastes different/better?

Anyways I did find some Floridians that grew them and ship them frozen but its pricey and I don't much care for banana's anyways.
 
This isn’t going to hit California you idiots. In Hawaii rn, Kauai more specifically. I’m in quite possibly the worst situation in the US. Fuck my life. I’ll update if anyone cares, see if my house gets hit. Everyone’s inland now.
Stay safe please.
 
On Big Island, phone keeps buzzing with updates. Went swimming at Hapuna earlier and right as we were walking to the car the lifeguards started getting everyone off the beach. I'm safely inland, but it's a bit surreal. Gas stations were slammed with people trying to fuel up and get out.
Where exactly are they planning to drive too that requires a full tank of gas? It's not like they can drive to another state. And I'm guessing all of the High Ground will run out of places to park cars long before any of them run out of gas.

Stay Safe dude.
please god knock out LA i promise i will stop being racist
The US and Canadian West Coasts are not real susceptable to Tsunami's except right down on the beachline. A quirk of geography/geology is that the North American West Coast IS the boundary between 2 plates. With the Pacific Plate subducting under California. So moast of the California Coast is effectively a seawall. A sharp cliff face. Typically high enough to not be topped by anything but an Apocalyptic Tsunami. All the Beachfront stuff will be wiped out. But downtown LA will likely be fine except for the toilets running backwards and exploding.
 
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Where exactly are they planning to drive too that requires a full tank of gas? It's not like they can drive to another state. And I'm guessing all of the High Ground will run out of places to park cars long before any of them run out of gas.

Stay Safe dude.
It's like every other state where people fill up the car and empty the store of perishables like milk and eggs before an expected power outage.

Also Midway had a bad time.
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Hmmm 12 miles deeps lots of cold water and some pretty heavy storms over the Pacific.

It wont be that bad I think. Sure lots of high water near the shore but I don't think it's going to wipe out Hawaii and Commifornia sadly.

The real danger is always a quake close to the surface of Earth, this one was 12 miles down so that's a lot of rock between it and the surface to eat up all that energy before it hits the water. Plus the water is cold atm so again energy transfer isn't ideal and we have some heavy storms in the area once again eating up lots of that wave power.

Will it be bad? Probably not, will it do heavy damages to shorelines? Probably.
 
I hope you Tsunami Kiwis don't die, but just in case, do you have any preferences for how we should memorialize you?

(open for all Kiwis in the tsunami path; leave a request, and if you never log on again after tonight, maybe we can do something special for you?)
If no one hears from me ever again, I want it to go on the record that Patrick S. Tomlinson is fat, and there are only two genders.
 
Gov (((Green))) says there’ll be more data from the NW Hawaiian Islands… and then his stream died.

I will edit if they say anything.

Eta: sounds like they aren’t sure what happened at midway can predict all that much and they really don’t know. Still sounds like it could cause damage in some parts of some islands. Approaching Kauai soon.
 
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