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N.C. port closed for punctured containers

Authorities close the port at Morehead City, N.C. on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010 after nine containers filled with "highly explosive materials" were punctured. An official said the material is a chemical commonly known as PETN, but it's not clear what form it was in. The Morehead port was shut down and people near it were urged to leave. No one was hurt. (AP Photo/Chuck Beckley, The Jacksonville Daily News)
Authorities close the port at Morehead City, N.C. on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010 after nine containers filled with “highly explosive materials” were punctured. An official said the material is a chemical commonly known as PETN, but it’s not clear what form it was in. The Morehead port was shut down and people near it were urged to leave. No one was hurt. (AP Photo/Chuck Beckley, The Jacksonville Daily News)

UPDATED:

MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. (AP) — Officials shut down a North Carolina port and urged people to leave the area Tuesday after a forklift operator punctured at least one container filled with a powerful explosive.

The material was pentaerythritol tetranitrate, but it’s not clear what form it was in, Mayor Jerry Jones said.

The chemical is also known as PETN, the substance authorities say was part of a device a Nigerian man used to try to bring down a Detroit-bound Northwest flight on Christmas Day. PETN is often used in military explosives and found inside blasting caps. It is also the primary ingredient in detonating cords used for industrial explosions.

Jones said the damage appeared to be an accident and there were no concerns about terrorism. He said a dock worker punctured a container as he was unloading barrels of the chemical.

Any accident involving hazardous materials must be reported immediately to the Morehead City Fire Department.

“That’s how we found out about it,” he said. “We don’t think there’s a danger. Everything is under control. But you have to be careful.”

Officials had earlier said nine containers were punctured, but Jones said he was not sure exactly how many were damaged.

He said he did not know the chemical was being shipped through the port, but whoever was shipping it should have contacted the city’s emergency management department.

A telephone message left for Morehead City Fire Chief Wes Lail was not immediately returned.

Karen Fox, a spokeswoman with the North Carolina State Ports Authority, said the chemical was being unloaded in Morehead City. But she said she did not know where the shipment came from or where it was headed.

“Explosive materials are handled routinely at the port,” she said.

Meanwhile, police told people near the port to stay away from windows and doors. Officers were sent downtown to knock on doors and relay alert and evacuation recommendations. About 8,800 people live in the coastal town.

Morehead City police spokeswoman Amy H. Thompson said people close to the port were leaving, but she did not know how many.

The Morehead port is one of the deepest on the East coast. Its Web site says its top import last year was sulfur products and the top export was phosphate.

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