Officials in New Zealand have released the first names of the 103 confirmed victims of Tuesday's earthquake in the city of Christchurch.
They include two adults and two infants - aged five and nine months.
Rescue workers are still combing through rubble but no survivors have been found since Wednesday afternoon.
Police say 228 people are missing, including 122 believed to have been in one smashed building where it is thought no-one survived.
Civil Defence Minister John Carter said that five bodies had been recovered in central Christchurch overnight.
"We are still hopeful there will still be people rescued but it is becoming unlikely," he said at a news conference in the capital, Wellington, on Friday morning.
"It is not until you are down in Christchurch that you have an appreciation of the devastation - it is unbelievable," Mr Carter said.
The 6.3-magnitude earthquake struck at a shallow depth of 5km (3.1 miles) early in the afternoon on Tuesday, when the South Island city was at its busiest.
It was Christchurch's second major tremor in five months, and New Zealand's deadliest natural disaster for 80 years. BBC News