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NewsSeptember 18, 2015

COQUIMBO, Chile -- Parts of this port city were a disaster zone Thursday after an 8.3-magnitude quake hit off the coast, killing at least 11 people and likely causing billions in damage. Overturned cars and splintered boats sat next to furniture, toppled adobe homes and fishing nets tangled in trees...

By LUIS ANDRES HENAO and EVA VERGARA ~ Associated Press
People embrace Thursday amid the destruction left behind by an earthquake-triggered tsunami in Concon, Chile. Several coastal towns were flooded from small tsunami waves set off by late Wednesday's magnitude-8.3 earthquake. (Matias Delacroix ~ Associated Press)
People embrace Thursday amid the destruction left behind by an earthquake-triggered tsunami in Concon, Chile. Several coastal towns were flooded from small tsunami waves set off by late Wednesday's magnitude-8.3 earthquake. (Matias Delacroix ~ Associated Press)

COQUIMBO, Chile -- Parts of this port city were a disaster zone Thursday after an 8.3-magnitude quake hit off the coast, killing at least 11 people and likely causing billions in damage. Overturned cars and splintered boats sat next to furniture, toppled adobe homes and fishing nets tangled in trees.

The most stunning thing about Wednesday night's earthquake, however, may be the relatively low amount of havoc caused by such a powerful shake.

While the quake led more than 1 million to evacuate coastal areas and no doubt caused much anxiety, seismologists said Chile's heavy investment in structural reinforcement of buildings and constant refinement of its tsunami alert system helped prevent what would have been a catastrophe in less prepared nations.

"Chile has good codes and good compliance, which together have reduced the vulnerabilities of their building stock over the decades," said Richard Olson, director of Florida International University's Extreme Events Institute. "I would rather be there in one of their cities than in many other countries in an earthquake."

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Living in one of the world's most seismically active places, the Andean nation's 17 million people have little choice but to become experts in earthquakes. The strongest earthquake ever recorded happened in Chile: a magnitude-9.5 tremor in 1960 that killed more than 5,000 people.

After another major earthquake in 1985, authorities began implementing strict construction codes similar to those used for highly seismic regions in the United States, said Kishor Jaiswal, a civil engineer with the U.S. Geological Survey.

Most buildings in urban areas of Chile are designed to withstand the vertical forces of gravity and the horizontal jolts an earthquake inflicts.

Wednesday's quake struck just offshore in the Pacific at 7:54 p.m. and was centered about 141 miles north-northwest of Santiago. It was 7.4 miles below the surface.

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