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After Powerful Quake, Tourists, Residents (And Cows) Stranded In New Zealand

An aerial photo taken Monday shows earthquake damage to State Highway One near Ohau Point in New Zealand, a day after a powerful magnitude 7.8 earthquake killed two people and caused massive infrastructure damage.
Mark Mitchell
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AFP/Getty Images
An aerial photo taken Monday shows earthquake damage to State Highway One near Ohau Point in New Zealand, a day after a powerful magnitude 7.8 earthquake killed two people and caused massive infrastructure damage.

After a powerful earthquake struck New Zealand on Sunday, several vital railroads and highways have been destroyed, stranding more than a thousand people in the affected region.

At least two people died in the Sunday night earthquake, which was magnitude 7.8 and triggered a small tsunami.

Since then, visitors and residents alike have also been grappling with a series of aftershocks — including several at magnitude 6.0 or higher.

Amora Hotel guests gather in a parking lot in Wellington, New Zealand, on Monday, a day after a powerful earthquake struck the region. A series of aftershocks kept residents and tourists on guard.
Hagen Hopkins / Getty Images
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Getty Images
Amora Hotel guests gather in a parking lot in Wellington, New Zealand, on Monday, a day after a powerful earthquake struck the region. A series of aftershocks kept residents and tourists on guard.

Stuart Cohen, reporting for NPR from Sydney, said military aircraft will be taking in tons of supplies and ferrying out hundreds of stranded tourists.

"New Zealand Prime Minister John Key says the damage is worse than expected," Cohen reports. "After flying over the region between Christchurch and the capital, Wellington, that was hardest hit by Sunday night's earthquake, Key told Radio New Zealand he saw the country's main highway and rail lines cut in several places."

Key called the road and rail issues "horrendous."

Hundreds of residents and about a thousand tourists are stuck in the coastal town of Kaikoura without access to functioning roads or trains, The Associated Press reports.

An emergency services worker inspects a bridge crossing the Waiau River in New Zealand on Monday, after a powerful earthquake on Sunday caused widespread infrastructure damage.
Matias Delacroix / Getty Images
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Getty Images
An emergency services worker inspects a bridge crossing the Waiau River in New Zealand on Monday, after a powerful earthquake on Sunday caused widespread infrastructure damage.

Water supplies and sewer systems were also knocked out by the quake. The wire service has more:

" 'From all directions, Kaikoura has essentially been isolated,' Air Commodore Darryn Webb, the Acting Commander of New Zealand's Joint Forces, told The Associated Press. 'There's a real imperative to support the town because it can't support itself.'

"Webb said the military planned to begin using four NH90 helicopters on Tuesday that could each transport about 18 people out of the town at a time. He said a ship was also leaving Auckland on Monday night that could potentially pick up hundreds of people if weather conditions allowed. ...

"He said the weather forecast wasn't looking great and the operation could take several days. He said that if needed, a C-130 military transport plane could drop fuel, water, food and other supplies to the town."

Cohen says winds of more than 90 mph are forecast for the region.

It's unclear how long it will take to handle immediate evacuations and aid drops. Key predicts that full cleanup and repair operations could take months and will cost billions of dollars, the AP says.

It's not just humans who were stranded by the earthquake: Three cows near Kaikoura also appeared to be stuck without any clear way out.

The lucky quake survivors, two adult cattle and a calf, were caught on camera on a small island of grass surrounded by deep ravines. Here's video, via The Guardian:

"It was not immediately clear who owned the cattle or what was being done to help them," the AP wrote in a brief story about the bovines in distress. (Headline: "Nowhere to Mooove.")

New Zealand has 4.7 million people and 10 million cattle, the wire service notes.

New Zealand's location on the Pacific "Ring of Fire," home to a great deal of seismic and volcanic activity, means earthquakes are fairly common.

Five years ago a devastating quake struck Christchurch, killing 185 people and causing $25 billion in damage.

Sunday's quake was much stronger, but the damage was reduced because the epicenter was in a rural area, the AP writes.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Camila Flamiano Domonoske covers cars, energy and the future of mobility for NPR's Business Desk.