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Papua New Guinea earthquake sound waves recorded in Ireland

PAPUA_EARTHQUAKE-1200x675 Papua New Guinea earthquake sound waves recorded in Ireland
Papua New Guinea was hit by an earthquake on Tuesday morning. Credit USGS / INSN

Irish seismographs picked up the sound waves from an earthquake halfway across the world in Papua New Guinea on Tuesday morning.

The magnitude 6.4 quake struck at 3:05 p.m. Irish Standard Time, according to the US Geological Survey.

Its sound waves took just ten minutes to travel the 14,000 kilometres to Dublin, where they were picked up by a seismograph managed by the Irish National Seismic Network.

BMKG, Indonesia’s meteorological service, has categorized the event as a shallow earthquake, triggered by the activity of the Sorong Fault, which extends toward the Bismarck Sea.

Earthquakes generate seismic waves that travel through the Earth, including sound waves called P-waves, which can propagate across the globe. These waves travel at different speeds depending on the Earth’s layers and the type of wave.

Other recent large earthquakes picked up by Irish-based seismographs include those in Turkey (23 April), Tonga (31 March), and Myanmar (28 March).

Dublin-1200x864 Papua New Guinea earthquake sound waves recorded in Ireland
The sound waves took just ten minutes to travel the 14,000 kilometres to Dublin. Credit INSN

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