Deadly Philippine quake raised seabed by up to two metres
A powerful earthquake that killed at least 61 people in the Philippines this week raised the seabed by as much as 2m, exposing coral and harming marine life, the environment department said on Sunday.
The 7.8-magnitude tremor in southern Mindanao island on Monday has also left at least 40 people missing, according to updated tolls from the disaster agency.
Local residents first reported the geological phenomenon known as "coastal uplift" two days after the quake, which extended the shoreline by as much as 200m in some places.
A shifting of the Cotabato Trench "pushed upward part of the coastlines of Sarangani and Davao Occidental (provinces) ... exposing the bottom of the sea that was originally submerged", the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said in a statement.
The Cotabato Trench, which lies as close as 50km off the coast of southern Mindanao, is the site of frequent seismic activity, including a "swarm" of thousands of mostly small earthquakes recorded in January.
A team dispatched to the area "found that long stretches of shoreline, coral reef and seagrass beds have been exposed.
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