Earth Changes
The quake, with a preliminary magnitude of 4.2, struck near the town of Kastamonu at 04.11 am, the observatory said.
Quakes are frequent in Turkey, much of which lies atop the active North Anatolian fault. Two devastating earthquakes killed about 18,000 people in northwestern Turkey in 1999.
About 25,000 local residents were put on alert. Emergency teams said there was no immediate need for evacuations but they might be necessary if there were more eruptions.
"It's a very slow-moving system that has caused all kinds of problems," says the CBC's Colleen Jones.
"It's going to be a really messy, dirty day."
All this comes after many areas in Eastern Canada were hit with heavy snow, winds, and rain on Monday.
Humans prefer to view these catastrophes as the result of misfortune, of randomness, of the unfathomable forces of Nature, of the whim of gods or of God.
But the exceptional disasters of the past 12 months raise a far more difficult question.
Could mankind be to blame?
The earthquake occurred at 16:47 local time (21:47 GMT). The epicenter was close to Puyo, capital of Pastaza province, 161 km southeast of Quito.
Only people at the top of tall buildings felt the quake, which caused scant damage.
The institute said that a collision between the Nazca ocean plate with the Ecuadorian continental plate caused the quake, forcing a noisy phenomenon called subduction.
Get a grip. Last-minute deals are always exciting, especially after overnight negotiations. But in the cold light of day we have to ask what exactly was achieved. The answer looks like little more than an agreement to carry on talking - and even that is hedged in places by promises to talk about very little that is meaningful.
Meanwhile, every square metre of the planet's surface is absorbing about 1 watt more heat than it can release into space. That may be only slightly more than the power of a Christmas tree light bulb. But it matters.
Comment: Comment: Read this article carefully. Politics may be hastening the "End of The World"... as we know it. Notice the following particularly:
At this magazine we regularly meet climate and Earth-system scientists who harbour real fears for themselves and their families about what the 21st century will bring. Jim Hansen, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and George Bush's top climate modeller, is not alone in thinking that we have, as he said last week, "at most 10 years"...This isn't science fiction, folks. It isn't some whacked out woman wearing a copper pyramid on her head claiming that the Planet Nibiru is gonna clean house in the Solar System. No indeedy...
An official at Japan's Meteorological Agency said chances of a tsunami were very low given the small magnitude of the quake.
The Meteorological and Geophysics Agency in Jakarta said the quake had its epicentre in the Moluccas sea between the regions of Sulawesi and the Moluccas islands.
"We don't have any reports of victims," said an agency official.
The U.S. Geological Survey on its website said the quake had a depth of 70 km (44 miles) and struck at 0709 GMT.
Some residents in the city of Manado in northern Sulawesi fled their homes, El Shinta radio said, but the local head of the Meteorological and Geophysics Agency in Manado said he had not received any reports of damage or casualties.
Indonesia is regularly hit by earthquakes.
The country is preparing to mark the first anniversary on Monday of a 9.15 magnitude quake off Sumatra island that triggered a massive tsunami that smashed into a dozen Indian Ocean nations, leaving 231,000 people dead or missing.
The pod of pilot whales began beaching themselves at Puponga at midday yesterday and by last night were strewn the length of the beach, at the top of the South Island, the Conservation Department's Golden Bay area manager, John Mason, said.
Three had died by early last night. "They have basically thrashed themselves to death," Mr Mason said.





Comment: Comment: Two HOURS of rocks tumbling??? Cold and rain?