亚洲国产精品自在在线观看|久久亚洲国产精品五月天婷婷|狠狠狠久久久免费观看|欧美激情中文字幕精品自拍

<address id="hwnm6"><var id="hwnm6"></var></address>

<dfn id="hwnm6"></dfn>
    1. <style id="hwnm6"><ul id="hwnm6"></ul></style>
      <pre id="hwnm6"><tt id="hwnm6"><th id="hwnm6"></th></tt></pre>

    2. China Focus: China's early warning system alarms public before quake waves arrive

      Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-18 20:35:09|Editor: Yamei
      Video PlayerClose

      People rest in a tent in the quake-stricken Changning County, southwest China's Sichuan Province. (Xinhua/Liu Changsong)

      CHENGDU, June 18 (Xinhua) -- A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Changning County in southwest China's Sichuan Province at 10:55 p.m. Monday.

      Moments later, many residents in the provincial capital Chengdu, more than 200 km away from the epicenter, heard a countdown from the public broadcasting system delivered by an automated female voice.

      About a minute later, a siren blared at the same time seismic waves hit Chengdu.

      "I was about to sleep when I heard the countdown and then the siren," said a woman surnamed Xie who lived on the seventh floor of an apartment building in Chengdu. She felt the tremors as the quake hit and rushed downstairs as a safety measure.

      Early warnings were also publicized in the city through a variety of channels, including local television stations, mobile apps and the Internet.

      As of Tuesday afternoon, 12 people died and another 135 were injured after the quake hit, according to the provincial emergency management department.

      Rescuers said nine people died in Changning and three in the neighboring Gongxian County. Most of the deaths were caused by damaged houses.

      On Monday night, residents in the city of Yibin, where Changning is located, received alarms 10 seconds before the quake hit.

      The early warning system was jointly built by the Institute of Care-Life, an organization that studies earthquakes in Chengdu, and local emergency management authorities.

      "The system was not designed to predict earthquakes," said Wang Tun, director of Care-Life. "It uses the theory that radio waves travel faster than seismic waves and provides automatic warnings seconds before quake waves arrive."

      Earthquake research has found that being aware of an earthquake three seconds beforehand can save 14 percent of casualties, 10 seconds can save 39 percent of casualties and 20 seconds can save 63 percent of casualties.

      The information can also be provided to authorities in charge of pivotal infrastructural projects such as high-speed railway and chemical plants, so they can take emergency measures to avert further economic loss or secondary damages.

      The early warning system has covered an area of 2.2 million square km, providing services to about 90 percent of the population in China's quake-prone regions, according to Wang.

      The system has provided early warnings in 52 destructive earthquakes in recent years, said Wang.

      KEY WORDS: China-Earthquake-Warning
      EXPLORE XINHUANET
      010020070750000000000000011103261381537701