-
Shane Van Gisbergen and more post-race interviews from Watkins Glen International | NASCAR on FOX - 14 mins ago
-
Is Southern California prepared to avoid a ‘Day Zero’ water crisis? - 32 mins ago
-
Lindsey Graham says Russia and Ukraine would likely need to swap land in a ceasefire deal - 36 mins ago
-
How to Watch Chicago Cubs vs St. Louis Cardinals: Live Stream MLB, TV Channel - 37 mins ago
-
Alicia Silverstone, Teri Hatcher choose to age naturally without plastic surgery - 38 mins ago
-
Tuned To Perfection: Alex Palou’s Latest INDYCAR Title One For History Books - 59 mins ago
-
Police issue Amber Alert for three children last seen with their babysitter - about 1 hour ago
-
Trump Sends 120 FBI Agents to DC Amid Crime Crackdown Threat: Report - about 1 hour ago
-
Family mourns Palestinian soccer star killed in Gaza - about 1 hour ago
-
Royals vs. Twins Highlights | MLB on FOX - 2 hours ago
Video shows Russian medics performing surgery during massive earthquake
Talk about steady hands. A team of Russian medics found themselves performing surgery on a patient during the 8.8 magnitude earthquake that struck Russia’s Far East region on Tuesday.
Security camera footage of the operation, released by Health Minister of Kamchatka Oleg Melnikov, shows the team of four healthcare professionals gripping the patient, as the operating room begins to violently shake.
The surgery was performed in the city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, according to the health minister.
“Despite the danger, the doctors remained calm and stayed with the patient until the very end,” Melnikov wrote on Telegram, adding that the patient is out of danger.
He did not release any other information about the operation or the patient.
The Russian earthquake, which hit off of the coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula, was one of the most powerful earthquakes ever recorded, according to data from the U.S. Geological Survey.
On Wednesday, local authorities called the earthquake “a remarkable event,” noting that it was the biggest tremor in the region since 1952.
Tsunami waves from the earthquake hit Russia, Japan — where nearly 2 million people were asked to evacuate — Hawaii, Alaska and parts of the West Coast.
No deaths have been reported.
Tsunami advisories have been downgraded in Hawaii, but remain in effect for the slate of islands, Alaska and parts of the West Coast. Tsunami warnings remain in effect for several countries in the South Pacific, including Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu.
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on Wednesday that the threat of a “major” tsunami on the West Coast has “passed completely.”
Source link