South America Blog

Massive Earthquake (8.8) in Chile

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In 1960, the Chilean city of Valdivia, about 800 km south of the capital of Santiago, suffered the greatest magnitude earthquake ever recorded - 9.5 on the Richter scale - and much of the country suffered from a subsequent tsunami. Early this morning, the city of Concepción, about 500 km south of the Chilean capital, came dangerously close to that number, being hit by a temblor measuring as high as 8.8. In this region, where many city inhabitants still use wood for cooking and heating, the danger of fire is as great, or greater, than that of falling buildings.

Fortunately, so far at least, the death toll of 78 is far lower than might be expected in other, more densely populated parts of the world - Santiago, Chile’s only megacity, is distant from the apparent epicenter. Nevertheless, Santiago’s Aeropuerto Internacional Arturo Merino Benítez (pictured above) suffered enough damage in the passenger terminal - fallen walkways and many broken windows - that it’s closed until further notice. Authorities are diverting flights to other Chilean airports and to the Argentine city of Mendoza, just across the Andes from Santiago.

Likewise, several overpasses have collapsed along Ruta 5, the country’s main north-south highway, and other roadways have bent or buckled - the television network TVN has shown cars hitting unexpected bumps at high speed but, to this point, none of them has lost control. Over the past couple decades, the quality of anti-seismic construction here has improved, but there are vulnerable older buildings in neighborhoods such as Barrio Brasil, where the Basílica del Salvador - damaged in a 1986 quake - has been propped up by a bulwark that collapsed yesterday and demolished automobiles parked alongside it.

Apparently the quake has had a lesser impact on tourist-oriented areas such as the southern lakes district, around Puerto Varas and Puerto Montt, though it was felt there. Other major destinations, such as San Pedro de Atacama and Torres del Paine, are well beyond the damage zone.

Because of the epicenter’s depth, there appears to be little chance of a tsunami along the Chilean coast, but the quake could trigger big waves in North America and across the Pacific. On the Juan Fernández archipelago, about 600 km off the Chilean coast, a mini-tsunami has apparently forced the inhabitants of San Juan Bautista, the only town, into the nearby hills.

The United States Geological Survey has just published an online summary of the quake, which has been followed by aftershocks as high as 6.9. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has issued a tsunami advisory for coastal California and Alaska, and a tsunami warning for the state of Hawaii.

Good information

Posted by rose gala on March 1, 2010 at 8:03 am

Thank you for providing information from your extensive network of contacts and friends in Chile. I appreciate hearing from you (and them) so that I can balance your info with what is being presented on U.S. television news. The info on areas which tourists visit is very helpful.

Quake

Posted by Donadelee on February 28, 2010 at 8:02 pm

My husband and I are planning to visit Chile in a couple of weeks. Does anyone have any information on how the earthquake has impacted travel? Do the buses still run? Are the roads from Santiago to the Lakes District passable? What about staying in places in the Central Valley?

Our daughter is in Santiago and was planning on attending the University of Chile, but it is my understanding that classes have been delayed from starting until Mar. 8. Was there damage to the university? And what about the metro system in Santiago?

The state department has recommended that tourists stay home. What is the recommendation of someone who is there?

If we do come - Is there anything we can bring or do once we get there to help? Thanks for any response(s).

Donadelee, you will want to

Posted by Wayne Bernhardson on March 1, 2010 at 4:03 am

Donadelee, you will want to read my new post about the quake, which answers some of your questions, and my own blog at http://www.southernconetravel.com/, where there are some useful comments from readers, and my responses as well. In the very short term, I think the State Department's recommendation is appropriate, but I myself a traveling to Santiago (by car from Argentina) about the same time you plan to. I expect overland travel to be slower than usual, with detours because of collapsed bridges and overpasses, but if even hotels and hostels in Barrio Brasil (one of Santiago's oldest, most vulnerable neighborhoods) remain in operation, more contemporary hotels will have done even better. I expect there may be some shortages and other inconveniences in the short term, but Chile is a well-organized country that has deal with similar problems before. I personally would not hesitate to go in two weeks, but that's my own judgment call.

tourism in Chile

Posted by Donadelee on March 4, 2010 at 6:03 pm

Thanks for your response. My husband and I have decided that we will come. We were thinking about bringing suitcases full of clothes that we might leave for the people who suffered the most damage in the costal region. What do you think? We'd like do still be tourists - but we're willing to help out wherever we can. Is there anything we could bring that might help? If you have any recommendations, we'd appreciate your advice.

As we have never been to Chile, we were hoping to visit Valpariso and Vina del Mar, the Cajon de Maipo and some vineyards before heading south to the Lakes district. Now all of our plans are up in the air. We haven't booked flights, as we were trying to stay within our budget by traveling by bus. But we don't even know if that is possible. Any recommendations? We have rented an apartment in Santiago where we planned to stay while we made our day trips. But other than that, we have no definite plans.....

THANKS for any advice anyone might share with us.

Dona

Dona, I'm not sure what you

Posted by Wayne Bernhardson on March 5, 2010 at 4:03 am

Dona, I'm not sure what you might do with a relatively small donation - though everything is significant - but I expect that your Santiago hotel can probably direct you to a place to leave it. The Cruz Roja (Red Cross) is always an option.

My understanding is that, while there is damage in Valpo and Viña, the main tourist areas in the Valparaíso hills have suffered relatively little damage, so staying there is an option - see the new edition of Moon Chile for details. A friend who lives in the Cajón del Maipo wrote me that they suffered little damage, and it is close to Santiago. There are wineries with Santiago's city limits that you can visit, but also several in the Casablanca valley en route to Viña and Valpo.

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