The Bahnas Observatory registered dozens of frequencies as a result of an earthquake that affected the coast of Turkey and Greece



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The Bahnas Observatory recorded dozens of frequencies as a result of an earthquake that affected the coast of Turkey and Greece

The Disaster Risk Management Unit of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers issued a statement on the earthquake that struck the western coast of Turkey and Greece, stating:

The National Council for Scientific Research issued a statement indicating that at 1:42 p.m. on Friday 30 of this year, an earthquake measuring 7 degrees on the Richter scale at a depth of 16 km in front of the city of Nyon Karlovacion on the Greek island of Samos in the Aegean Sea that affected the western coast of Turkey. And Greece: Initial reports indicated that buildings were damaged with a number of casualties and injuries, and this earthquake caused an increase in seawater that flooded some streets in the Turkish city of Izmir.

Immediately after the earthquake, a warning was issued about the possibility of a tidal wave (tsunami) for the Mediterranean coastal countries, including Lebanon, Syria and occupied Palestine, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Cyprus, Croatia, Montenegro, Crete, Greece and Italy, and the matter was limited to a quick warning. Dispel.

The Bahnas Observatory and all the stations distributed in the north, center and south of Lebanon affiliated with the National Center for Geophysics of the National Council for Scientific Research recorded dozens of frequencies resulting from this earthquake, with an intensity ranging between 3 and 5 degrees in the Richter scale.

It is worth noting that this earthquake occurred within the Turkish fault group in the Aegean region, and that there is no link between these faults and the Lebanon fault group of the African rift. The tsunami wave alert was included in the usual information exchange in the Mediterranean network, and only for information and monitoring.



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