Earth Changes
2013-01-15 16:09:37 UTC
2013-01-15 05:09:37 UTC-11:00 at epicenter
Location
62.580°S 161.397°W depth=10.0km (6.2mi)
Nearby Cities
1027km (638mi) ENE of Scott Island Bank, Antarctica
2571km (1598mi) SSE of Dunedin, New Zealand
2617km (1626mi) SE of Invercargill, New Zealand
2618km (1627mi) SE of Gore, New Zealand
2844km (1767mi) SSE of Wellington, New Zealand
Technical Details

A pedestrian looks at the falling snow while crossing the road in the Ginza shopping district in Tokyo on January 14, 2013.
Coming of Age Day, held the second Monday of every January, celebrates those who have turned or are about to turn 20 years old. Ceremonies and parties are held in communities across Japan, and the newly-minted adults often wear traditional kimono for the occasion.
But with wind-driven snow flying in the Japanese capital Monday, getting around proved difficult. Roads were clogged with slush, and the country's extensive rail network experienced delays. The snow was the first of this winter for Tokyo.
America's first official disaster areas of 2013 were designated because the 597 have experienced severe drought conditions for eight consecutive weeks, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Last year, 2,245 counties in 39 states were declared disasters by the USDA. With continued drought projected for much of the United States, farmers may have another hard year ahead of them. A hard year for farmers means a had year for anyone who eats. Global food prices are strongly affected by America's harvests.
Over 20 sinkholes have opened up in the ground since last September.
The cave-ins, which range in size, have seen houses collapse and rivers run dry. And there is never any warning as to where and when the sinkhole occur.

The flanks of the Stromboli volcano north of Sicily spews lava towards the sea on January 14, 2013 after one of Europe's most active volanoes churned into activity. Spectacular lava flows and smoke from an active volcano on the Italian island of Stromboli on Monday sparked fear among inhabitants but geophysicists said the situation was under control.
Stromboli is part of the seven-island Eolian Archipelago just off Sicily in southern Italy.
The volcano is active but on Monday there was a particularly powerful eruption and sustained lava flows following four days of heightened activity.
All climate scientists agree that the sun affects Earth's climate to some extent. They only disagree about whether or not the effect form the sun is minor compared to man-made causes.
When I told the December 2012 UN climate summit in Doha that there had been no warming for at least 16 years, the furious delegates howled me down.
The UN later edited the videotape to remove the howling. The delegates were furious not because I was speaking out of turn (they did not know that at the time) but because the truth was inconvenient.
The earthquake, about 10 to 12 kilometres from Wynyard, hit at 7.21am (AEDT) on Sunday, sending short and sharp tremors to nearby Burnie and as far away as Launceston, said Geoscience Australia seismologist Jonathan Bathgate.
Mr Bathgate said the agency received around 100 calls from residents who felt the tremors.
"It's been fairly widely-felt across that section of Tasmania," he said.
"They generally hear a loud noise and feel a sharp, sudden jolt.
"The phones have been just ringing constantly.
"I think it woke a few people up."
Dozens of record highs were set or tied from Ontario through Florida on Saturday while record lows were found throughout the West. Additional records have been broken as of Sunday afternoon, especially over the mid-Atlantic into western New England.
Below is a list of selected official record high temperatures from Saturday:
- Montgomery, Ala. - 80 degrees broke the previous record of 76 from 1950.
- Tampa, Fla. - 83 degrees broke the previous record of 82 from 1989.
- Atlanta, Ga. - 76 degrees broke the previous record of 71 from 1995.
- Alpena, Mich. - 57 degrees broke the record of 49 from 2005.
- Bradford, Pa. - 53 degrees broke the record of 50 from 2006.
- Bluefield, W.V. - 72 degrees broke the record of 68 from 2005.
- Ottawa, Ontario - 45 degrees broke the record of 42 from 1932.
- Toronto, Ontario - 55 degrees broke the record of 49 from 2006.
- Columbia, S.C. - 82 degrees broke the record of 74 from 2005.
Populations of bluefin tuna in the western Pacific Ocean are down by nearly 97 percent from pre-fishing levels, according to a stock assessment by researchers.
"We found the Pacific bluefin stock is being overfished," said Steve Teo, a fisheries biologist at the Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla, Calif., who was involved in the assessment.
The news comes a few days after an enormous, 489-pound (222-kilogram) tuna fetched $1.76 million at a Japanese auction, the Associated Press reported. Strong demand for tuna, primarily for use in sushi, has driven increased harvesting of the fish. Over the past 15 years, its population in the western Pacific has steadily declined and is now at or near an all-time low, Teo told LiveScience.
There are currently no catch limits for tuna in the western Pacific. About 90 percent of the fish that are caught are juveniles, according to the stock assessment.
Amanda Nickson, director of global tuna conservation for the Pew Environment Group, called for a temporary halt to fishing. "We think the most responsible thing to do is to suspend the fishery until we can put measures in place that will ensure that the population decline is reversed," Nickson said.
She called on the governments of the countries that harvest the fish - including Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Mexico and the United States - to do something about the tuna's plummeting numbers.













