logo
Surgeons keep steady hands in 8.8 quake

Surgeons keep steady hands in 8.8 quake

A team of medics was in the middle of surgery in the Far Eastern Russian city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky when a very powerful earthquake shook their equipment and the floor beneath them.
The medics used their hands to try to steady both the patient and their equipment during the 8.8-magnitude tremor on Wednesday (local time) CCTV footage released by the Kamchatka region's Health Ministry showed.
"Despite the danger, the doctors remained calm and stayed with the patient until the very end," Oleg Melnikov, the minister, wrote on Telegram.
He gave no details of the surgery but added that the patient was currently out of danger.
Russian scientists said the quake off the coast of Kamchatka, which triggered tsunami warnings as far away as Hawaii, Japan and Chile, and alerts throughout the Pacific, was the most powerful to hit the region since 1952.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there had been no casualties in Russia from the quake, crediting solid building construction and the smooth working of alert systems.
Still, there were scenes of chaos along Russia's remote and sparsely populated Far Eastern seaboard, and scattered reports of damage.
Roman Kripakov, a chef in Severo-Kurilsk on Paramushir, one of the Pacific Kuril Islands chain, said he was at the cafe where he works when it began to shake.
'We ran out onto the street, and saw that all the buildings were trembling. Pipes, bricks, they were all falling down from the roofs,' he told Reuters
'Did I think about death? Yes, it did come to mind. I asked everyone for forgiveness, and recalled happy moments in my life. I wrote to my wife.'
A verified video shot by a Severo-Kurilsk resident showed water engulfing a fish processing plant as it rushed inland, carrying a lightweight metal building and containers with it.
A woman can be heard cursing as she laments the loss of the plant. "Our factory is sinking along with our seafood production," she says.
Elsewhere on the Kamchatka Peninsula, video showed startled sea lions diving into the sea as the quake hit Antsiferov Island, just off the coast.
The island is known as a natural habitat for Steller sea lions, a large, near-threatened species. Volcano erupts
The Klyuchevskoy volcano on Russia's Kamchatka peninsula began erupting after the 8.8 quake, a geological monitoring service said.
In a statement posted on Telegram, the Russian Academy of Sciences' United Geophysical Service said: "A descent of burning hot lava is observed on the western slope. Powerful glow above the volcano, explosions."
Located about 450km north of the regional capital, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Klyuchevskoy is one of the highest volcanoes in the world.
It has erupted several times in recent years.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cold shoulder tells story of people's past
Cold shoulder tells story of people's past

Otago Daily Times

time7 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Cold shoulder tells story of people's past

A reconstruction of the burial of Princess Ukok. PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES One of my most memorable cruises as a guest speaker took us to Kerch, where today Putin's infamous bridge links Russia to the Ukraine. We were there to visit a remarkable archaeological site, the 4th century BC Royal Kurgan. This is a Russian term for a grave covered by a mound or tumulus, the grave chamber being constructed of timber capped by boulders. Usually, they contain the remains of elite members of their community but they are such obvious features on the landscape that most were looted long ago for their opulent offerings. The Scythian ice mummies of the Russia Altai, 2300 years old, had remarkable tattoos on the arms and shoulders. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Kurgans are found from Ukraine right across the Russian steppes as far as the Altai uplands, and are usually linked with people known to history as the Scythians. Now infra-red technology has been used to obtain detailed images of the tattoos on the body of a 50-year-old woman from an Altai kurgan. There, permafrost in the tombs has preserved bodies that are more than 2000 years old. These mummified remains have made it possible to recreate very precisely what those nomadic horse-riding warriors looked like, and warriors they were — one man had been scalped and killed with an axe. They certainly decorated their shoulders and arms with richly detailed works from the hands of outstanding tattoo artists. Animal scenes dominate, particularly antlered deer being attacked by predators that include real animals, such as the snow leopard, and fictitious beasts. Hunting scenes were also carved on to the wooden headdress of this man, showing a bird of prey, probably an eagle, devouring the head of a deer. 2300 year old carpet from an Altai kurgan. Women too were interred with great wealth. In 1993 at the Site of Ukok, Russian archaeologists opened the kurgan of the so-called Ice Maiden. Her coffin was extended to make room for her felt hat, which was decorated with images of swans and cats covered in gold. Six horses were buried with her and one can admire their richly decorated harnesses. One kurgan contained a four-wheeled cart, another a superb pile carpet that would have taken a single weaver at least 18 months to complete. The exterior panel is decorated with horse riders, and an interior panel with deer. There are also Chinese silks, one of which was embroidered with images of birds and flowers, and incorporated into a saddle cloth. We are indeed fortunate that these artistic and vibrant people's graves have been deep frozen for at least 2000 years.

Terrible thirst hits Gaza with polluted aquifers and broken pipelines
Terrible thirst hits Gaza with polluted aquifers and broken pipelines

RNZ News

time06-08-2025

  • RNZ News

Terrible thirst hits Gaza with polluted aquifers and broken pipelines

By Ramadan Abed and Nidal al-Mughrabi for Reuters Palestinian children carry gallons of clean water from a distribution point in Gaza City. Photo: AFP / OMAR AL-QATTAA Weakened by hunger, many Gazans trek across a ruined landscape each day to haul all their drinking and washing water - a painful load that is still far below the levels needed to keep people healthy. Even as global attention has turned to starvation in Gaza, where after 22 months of a devastating Israeli military campaign a global hunger monitor says a famine scenario is unfolding, the water crisis is just as severe according to aid groups. Though some water comes from small desalination units run by aid agencies, most is drawn from wells in a brackish aquifer that has been further polluted by sewage and chemicals seeping through the rubble, spreading diarrhoea and hepatitis. Israeli pipelines that once supplied Gaza with much of its clean water are now dry. Israel stopped all water and electricity supply to Gaza early in the war. Although it resumed some supply later, pipelines were damaged and Gaza water officials say none has entered recently. COGAT, the Israeli military aid coordination agency, did not respond to a request for comment on whether Israel is supplying water. Most water and sanitation infrastructure has been destroyed and pumps from the aquifer often rely on electricity from small generators - for which fuel is rarely available. Moaz Mukhaimar, aged 23 and a university student before the war, said he has to walk about a kilometre, queuing for two hours, to fetch water. He often goes three times a day, dragging it back to the family tent over bumpy ground on a small metal handcart. "How long will we have to stay like this?" he asked, pulling two larger canisters of very brackish water to use for cleaning and two smaller ones of cleaner water to drink. His mother, Umm Moaz, 53, said the water he collects is needed for the extended family of 20 people living in their small group of tents in Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip. "The children keep coming and going and it is hot. They keep wanting to drink. Who knows if tomorrow we will be able to fill up again," she said. Their struggle for water is replicated across the tiny, crowded territory where nearly everybody is living in temporary shelters or tents without sewage or hygiene facilities and not enough water to drink, cook and wash as disease spreads. The United Nations says the minimum emergency level of water consumption per person is 15 litres a day for drinking, cooking, cleaning and washing. Average daily consumption in Israel is around 247 litres a day according to Israeli rights group B'Tselem. Bushra Khalidi, humanitarian policy lead for aid agency Oxfam in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories said the average consumption in Gaza now was 3-5 litres a day. Oxfam said last week that preventable and treatable water-borne diseases were "ripping through Gaza", with reported rates increasing by almost 150 percent over the past three months. Israel blames Hamas for the suffering in Gaza and says it provides adequate aid for the territory's 2.3 million inhabitants. Khadija Sobh, 18 gives water to her seven-month daughter Janin Sobh inside their tent in the Daraj neighbourhood in Gaza City. Photo: AFP / OMAR AL-QATTAA "Water scarcity is definitely increasing very much each day and people are basically rationing between either they want to use water for drinking or they want to use a lot for hygiene," said Danish Malik, a global water and sanitation official for the Norwegian Refugee Council. Merely queuing for water and carrying it now accounts for hours each day for many Gazans, often involving jostling with others for a place in the queue. Scuffles have sometimes broken out, Gazans say. Collecting water is often the job of children as their parents seek out food or other necessities. "The children have lost their childhood and become carriers of plastic containers, running behind water vehicles or going far into remote areas to fill them for their families," said Munther Salem, water resources head at the Gaza Water and Environment Quality Authority. With water so hard to get, many people living near the beach wash in the sea. A new water pipeline funded by the United Arab Emirates is planned, to serve 600,000 people in southern Gaza from a desalination plant in Egypt. But it could take several more weeks to be connected. Much more is needed, aid agencies say. UNICEF spokesperson James Elder said the long-term deprivations were becoming deadly. "Starvation and dehydration are no longer side effects of this conflict. They are very much frontline effects." Oxfam's Khalidi said a ceasefire and unfettered access for aid agencies was needed to resolve the crisis. "Otherwise we will see people dying from the most preventable diseases in Gaza - which is already happening before our eyes." - Reuters

Earthquake appears to have damaged Russian nuclear sub base
Earthquake appears to have damaged Russian nuclear sub base

RNZ News

time04-08-2025

  • RNZ News

Earthquake appears to have damaged Russian nuclear sub base

Rescuers inspect a damaged kindergarten building in Russia's Kamchatka region after the 8.8 magnitude earthquake struck off Russia's far east coast. Photo: AFP A nuclear submarine base in Russia's remote Far East region was damaged last week following one of the most powerful earthquakes to hit the area in decades, the New York Times reported on Monday, citing satellite images. Photos captured by Planet Labs, a commercial satellite imaging firm, show damage to a floating pier at the Rybachiy submarine base on the Kamchatka Peninsula, the newspaper reported. One section of the pier appears to have broken away from its anchor point. Aside from the damaged pier, the satellite imagery does not show any other major destruction. Reuters could not independently verify the report. There was no immediate response from Russia's defence ministry outside business hours to a Reuters request for comment. A very powerful magnitude 8.8 earthquake off Russia's Far Eastern Kamchatka coast on Wednesday triggered tsunami warnings as far away as French Polynesia and Chile, and was followed by an eruption of the most active volcano on the peninsula. The Rybachiy nuclear submarine base, a strategic hub for Russia's Pacific Fleet, serves as a facility for the maintenance, deployment, and operations of the country's nuclear-powered submarines in the Pacific region. - Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store