30
   

Quake activity along the San Andreas fault is picking up

 
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Thu 24 Apr, 2014 05:59 pm
@Butrflynet,
Interesting, long, article that compares the Vancouver quake to the Christchurch, nz quake of 2011.

This excerpt summarizes it, but the charts and article are a good read.


Quote:
A magnitude 6.6 is a genuinely sizeable earthquake — not a megaquake catastrophe, but larger than the M6.3 that devastated Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2011. The Vancouver Island earthquake was nearly twice as big, and released over twice as much energy, as the one that flattened parts of Christchurch, so why no reported damage? It's not better preparedness. Instead, as in real-estate, it comes down to location. Christchurch is on saturated sediments of an infilled valley that amplify shaking, while the majority of Vancouver Island is young bedrock that attenuates shaking. While the Christchurch earthquake was directly below the city, this earthquake hit offshore of the largely-uninhabited northwest coast of Vancouver Island. The low population density on the north end of Vancouver Island reduced the number of people directly impacted by this earthquake, but the shaking was strong enough to be felt as far south as Vancouver and as far inland as the Okanagan Valley.


http://space.io9.com/earthquake-on-vancouver-island-1566965073
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 12 May, 2014 01:54 pm
M5.1 - OFF THE COAST OF OREGON

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 5.1
Date-Time
12 May 2014 18:51:00 UTC
12 May 2014 09:51:01 near epicenter
12 May 2014 12:51:00 standard time in your timezone
Location 43.716N 128.055W
Depth 10 km
Distances
302 km (187 mi) WNW of Bandon, Oregon
312 km (193 mi) W of Coos Bay, Oregon
385 km (238 mi) W of Roseburg, Oregon
394 km (244 mi) WSW of Corvallis, Oregon
422 km (261 mi) WSW of Salem, Oregon
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Tue 13 May, 2014 12:59 am
M6.8 - SOUTH OF PANAMA

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 6.8
Date-Time
13 May 2014 06:35:24 UTC
13 May 2014 01:35:25 near epicenter
13 May 2014 00:35:24 standard time in your timezone
Location 7.249N 82.330W
Depth 10 km
Distances
105 km (65 mi) SE of Punta de Burica, Panama
124 km (76 mi) S of Pedregal, Panama
128 km (79 mi) SSE of Puerto Armuelles, Panama
130 km (80 mi) S of David, Panama
354 km (219 mi) SSE of San Jose, Costa Rica
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Tue 3 Jun, 2014 01:01 pm
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-la-quakes-20140603-story.html

Quakes are increasing, but scientists aren't sure what it means

No, it's not your imagination: The Los Angeles area is feeling more earthquakes this year..

After a relatively quiet period of seismic activity in the Los Angeles area, the last five months have been marked by five earthquakes larger than 4.0. That hasn't occurred since 1994, the year of the destructive Northridge earthquake that produced 53 such temblors.

Over the next two decades, there were some years that passed without a single quake 4.0 or greater.

Earthquake experts said 2014 is clearly a year of increased seismic activity, but they said it's hard to know whether the recent string of quakes suggests that a larger one is on the way.

"Probably this will be it, and there won't be any more 4s. But the chance we will have a bigger earthquake this year is more than if we hadn't had this cluster," U.S. Geological Survey seismologist Lucy Jones said. "Every earthquake makes another earthquake more likely."

Quakes in the magnitude 4 range are large enough to be felt over wide areas but generally too small to cause much damage. The largest this year was a magnitude 5.1 in La Habra, which caused several million dollars in damage. Others hit Fontana and Rowland Heights.

But scientists are particularly intrigued by the other two quakes, which were centered along the 405 Freeway under the Santa Monica Mountains.

In addition to a 4.4 quake March 17 in Encino and Sunday's 4.2 temblor a few miles away in Brentwood, 15 earthquakes between magnitude 1.0 and 2.5 hit between January and March in the Santa Monica Mountains near Wilacre Park.

The quakes show that seismic activity underneath the Santa Monica Mountains is increasing, Caltech seismologist Egill Hauksson said. The mountains were formed by earthquake activity over millions of years.

The quakes occurred in an area of relatively steep terrain and within less than three miles of each other, suggesting that they were related, Hauksson said.

"We don't know if it has ended or if it will keep going," Hauksson said.

After the March 17 quake, the leading theory from seismologists was that it could have been an aftershock of the 1994 Northridge earthquake, which killed 57 people. But on Monday, Hauksson said it's possible both quakes could be part of a new seismic sequence.

Experts have also been investigating possible causes for the La Habra quake.

The epicenter was in a region that has seen significant oil extraction over the decades. So Hauksson studied whether oil pumping could have triggered the 5.1 quake as well as the 4.1 aftershock in Rowland Heights.

A review of data found that it was unlikely, Hauksson said. There was a doubling of petroleum extraction from Santa Fe Springs in the year before the La Habra earthquake, but that was roughly seven miles from the epicenter — too far for a connection to be made.

There was also "no trail of seismicity from the oil field to the 5.1 earthquake," Hauksson said.

The U.S. Geological Survey has been studying the increase in earthquakes larger than 3.0 in the central and eastern United States in recent years. There have been more than 100 a year on average in the last four years, up from 20 a year between 1970 to 2000.

The USGS studies suggest that the increased number of earthquakes coincides with the injection of wastewater deep underground, a process that occurs after an oil extraction technique called hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking."

According to the agency, a magnitude 5.6 earthquake in 2011 appeared to be related to wastewater disposal in rural central Oklahoma, damaging more than a dozen homes and leading to some injuries.

Three Los Angeles City Council members want city, state and federal groups to determine whether fracking and other forms of oil and gas "well stimulation" played any role in the March 17 earthquake.

Hauksson said study of whether the injection of wastewater underground after fracking contributes to earthquakes in California is difficult because there's no publicly available, comprehensive database about what volumes of fluid oil companies are injecting into the ground and where it is occurring.

Jones said the number of sizable quakes over a short period is notable, but also important to keep in perspective.

"That's definitely way more than the long-term average," Jones said. "Is that something to worry about? If we knew that, we'd be predicting earthquakes."
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 16 Jun, 2014 08:58 am
M6.1 - NORTHERN ALASKA

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 6.1
Date-Time
16 Jun 2014 12:01:11 UTC
16 Jun 2014 04:01:11 near epicenter
16 Jun 2014 06:01:11 standard time in your timezone
Location 67.704N 161.999W
Depth 15 km
Distances
43 km (26 mi) ENE of Noatak, Alaska
709 km (439 mi) WNW of College, Alaska
714 km (442 mi) WNW of Fairbanks, Alaska
724 km (448 mi) WNW of Badger, Alaska
1504 km (932 mi) NW of Whitehorse, Canada
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 16 Jun, 2014 09:00 am
Quakes in the Juneau area are getting bigger and more frequent. Hope this isn't a precursor to a 60's type Anchorage quake.
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 16 Jun, 2014 11:00 am
@Butrflynet,
http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/20140613/five-active-volcanoes-keeping-alaska-scientists-busy

Five active volcanoes keeping Alaska scientists busy

An advisory alert has been issued for a remote volcano in the western Aleutian Islands after dozens of earthquakes were reported in the area, an early sign of volcanic unrest.

The change means that five volcanoes being monitored in Alaska are now simultaneously active, the most in recent memory, said Matt Haney, a research geophysicist at the Alaska Volcano Observatory [3].

“We might have had four before, but we haven’t had five,” Haney said.

A total of 52 volcanoes in Alaska are considered by the observatory to be “historically active.” All are monitored daily through satellites, and about 30 are monitored with ground-based seismometers that measure earthquake activity. On Friday, the observatory raised the color code alert level for the Semisopochnoi (pronounced Semi-so-poch-noi) volcano to “yellow,” a reflection of heightened unrest.

Haney said there doesn’t appear to be a connection between the five, just random chance. The other four volcanoes -- Cleveland and Veniaminof volcanoes are in the “yellow” alert level, and the Pavlof and Shishaldin volcanoes are classified as “orange” -- are among the most active in the state.

But Semisopochnoi is “kind of the oddball,” Haney said. It’s only erupted twice in recorded history, first in 1873 and then in 1987.

“There hasn’t been any activity here for a long time,” Haney said. The volcano is about 40 miles northeast of Amchitka Island and 130 miles west of Adak.

A better monitoring system also played a role in raising the alert level. Scientists have been receiving much more consistent seismic data about the volcano after a telemetry system on Amchitka Island was repaired in late May, said Game McGimsey, a volcanologist with the observatory. The seismic network for Semisopochnoi was installed in 2005, but the data were previously too spotty to assign a color code, McGimsey said.

On Thursday, the Semisopochnoi monitors recorded a total of 65 earthquakes on Thursday alone, an episode known as an “earthquake swarm.” All of the quakes were listed at a magnitude of 2.0 or lower.

A day earlier, 22 earthquakes occurred, and 15 the day before that, showing a clear escalation pattern, Haney said. The quakes occur as a result of magma rising up beneath the earth.

In 2012, earthquake swarms occurred at the volcanic Little Sitkin Island and at Mount Iliamna, but there was no surface eruptive activity in either case.

In 2009, however, an earthquake swarm preceded the eruption at Mount Redoubt, Haney said.

“The jury’s still out” on what will happen next at Semisopochnoi, Haney said. “We’re going to keep a close eye and see if things progress.”

All volcanoes on the Aleutian arc are considered a potential hazard to the North Pacific air routes.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 23 Jun, 2014 04:04 pm
M8.0 - RAT ISLANDS, ALEUTIAN ISLANDS, ALASKA

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 8.0
Date-Time
23 Jun 2014 20:53:10 UTC
23 Jun 2014 11:53:11 near epicenter
23 Jun 2014 14:53:10 standard time in your timezone
Location 51.797N 178.759E
Depth 114 km
Distances
24 km (14 mi) SE of Little Sitkin Island, Alaska
1370 km (849 mi) E of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy, Russia
1387 km (859 mi) E of Vilyuchinsk, Russia
1388 km (860 mi) E of Yelizovo, Russia
2957 km (1833 mi) W of Whitehorse, Canada
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 23 Jun, 2014 04:08 pm
@Butrflynet,
TSUNAMI INFORMATION STATEMENT NUMBER 2
NWS PACIFIC TSUNAMI WARNING CENTER EWA BEACH HI
1127 AM HST MON JUN 23 2014

THE EARTHQUAKE MAGNITUDE IS INCREASED FROM 7.1 TO 8.0
IN THIS STATEMENT. DUE THE THE DEPTH OF THE EARTHQUAKE
THERE CONTINUES TO BE NO TSUNAMI THREAT TO HAWAII.


TO - CIVIL DEFENSE IN THE STATE OF HAWAII

SUBJECT - TSUNAMI INFORMATION STATEMENT

THIS STATEMENT IS FOR INFORMATION ONLY. NO ACTION REQUIRED.

AN EARTHQUAKE HAS OCCURRED WITH THESE PRELIMINARY PARAMETERS

ORIGIN TIME - 1053 AM HST 23 JUN 2014
COORDINATES - 51.8 NORTH 178.8 EAST
LOCATION - RAT ISLANDS ALEUTIAN ISLANDS ALASKA
MAGNITUDE - 8.0 MOMENT

EVALUATION

THE U.S. NATIONAL TSUNAMI WARNING CENTER HAS ISSUED A REGIONAL
TSUNAMI ADVISORY AND/OR WARNING FOR OTHER PARTS OF THE PACIFIC
LOCATED CLOSER TO THE EARTHQUAKE. BASED ON ALL AVAILABLE DATA...
THERE IS NO TSUNAMI THREAT TO HAWAII. REPEAT. BASED ON ALL
AVAILABLE DATA... THERE IS NO TSUNAMI THREAT TO HAWAII.

THIS WILL BE THE FINAL STATEMENT ISSUED FOR THIS EVENT UNLESS
ADDITIONAL DATA ARE RECEIVED.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 23 Jun, 2014 04:14 pm
@Butrflynet,
NWS NATIONAL TSUNAMI WARNING CENTER PALMER AK
143 PM AKDT MON JUN 23 2014

UPDATES IN THIS MESSAGE INCLUDE NEW OBSERVATIONS.

...THE TSUNAMI WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT...


...THE TSUNAMI ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT
...


WARNINGS/ADVISORIES/WATCHES
---------------------------
TSUNAMI WARNING IN EFFECT FOR...

* THE COASTAL AREAS OF ALASKA FROM NIKOLSKI ALASKA TO ATTU
ALASKA



TSUNAMI ADVISORY IN EFFECT FOR...

* THE COASTAL AREAS OF ALASKA FROM UNIMAK PASS ALASKA /WHICH
IS LOCATED 80 MILES NE OF UNALASKA/ TO NIKOLSKI ALASKA

* FOR OTHER US AND CANADIAN PACIFIC COASTS IN NORTH AMERICA -
THE LEVEL OF TSUNAMI DANGER IS BEING EVALUATED. FURTHER

INFORMATION WILL BE PROVIDED IN SUPPLEMENTARY MESSAGES.


IMPACTS FOR TSUNAMI WARNING AREAS
---------------------------------
* WIDESPREAD DANGEROUS COASTAL FLOODING ACCOMPANIED BY POWERFUL
CURRENTS ARE POSSIBLE AND MAY CONTINUE FOR MANY HOURS AFTER
TSUNAMI ARRIVAL.

* THE FIRST WAVE MAY NOT BE THE LARGEST.


IMPACTS FOR TSUNAMI ADVISORY AREAS
----------------------------------
* A TSUNAMI CAPABLE OF PRODUCING STRONG CURRENTS OR WAVES DANGEROUS
TO PERSONS IN OR VERY NEAR THE WATER IS EXPECTED.

* CURRENTS MAY BE HAZARDOUS TO SWIMMERS... BOATS... AND COASTAL
STRUCTURES AND MAY CONTINUE FOR MANY HOURS AFTER THE TSUNAMI
ARRIVAL.

* THE FIRST WAVE MAY NOT BE THE LARGEST.


RECOMMENDED ACTIONS
-------------------
* IF YOU ARE IN A WARNING AREA - MOVE INLAND TO HIGHER GROUND.

* IF YOU ARE IN AN ADVISORY AREA - MOVE OFF THE BEACH AND OUT OF
HARBORS AND MARINAS. WIDESPREAD INUNDATION OF LAND IS NOT
EXPECTED FOR ADVISORY AREAS.

* BE ALERT TO INSTRUCTIONS FROM YOUR LOCAL EMERGENCY OFFICIALS.

* DO NOT GO TO THE COAST TO OBSERVE THE TSUNAMI.

* DO NOT RETURN TO THE COAST UNTIL LOCAL EMERGENCY OFFICIALS
INDICATE IT IS SAFE TO DO SO.
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 23 Jun, 2014 04:42 pm
@Butrflynet,
http://www.weather.com/safety/earthquake/alaska-earthquake-aleutian-islands-tsunami-warning-20140623


The first tsunami measurement came from Amchitka, Alaska, about 25 miles from the quake's epicenter. A tsunami of 0.6 foot (about 7 inches) was recorded at 12:36 p.m. local time. The NTWC said that the depth of the earthquake, some 71 miles below the earth's surface, would mitigate the extent of the tsunami. Still, the center warned that the first tsunami wave is not necessarily the highest.

...

Large earthquakes in this region have caused significant tsunamis in the past. An Aleutian Islands quake in 1946 caused a tsunami that killed 96 people in Hilo, Hawaii, and prompted the establishment of the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.

The much stronger magnitude-9.2 Good Friday earthquake of 1964, which took place farther east near Anchorage, caused over 100 tsunami deaths in Alaska, five in Oregon, and 13 in California.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Mon 23 Jun, 2014 08:26 pm
M7.2 - KERMADEC ISLANDS, NEW ZEALAND

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 7.2
Date-Time
23 Jun 2014 19:19:18 UTC
23 Jun 2014 07:19:19 near epicenter
23 Jun 2014 13:19:18 standard time in your timezone
Location 29.897S 177.676W
Depth 30 km
Distances
73 km (45 mi) SSE of Raoul Island, New Zealand
989 km (613 mi) NE of Whangarei, New Zealand
1002 km (621 mi) SSW of Nuku`alofa, Tonga
1020 km (632 mi) NNE of Whakatane, New Zealand
1034 km (641 mi) NE of Tauranga, New Zealand

http://www.3news.co.nz/Quake-strikes-near-Raoul-Island/tabid/423/articleID/349906/Default.aspx

A magnitude 6.9 earthquake also struck near Raoul Island, 1100km north-east of Whangarei, shortly before 7:30 this morning.
The quake, originally listed as magnitude 7.2, struck at 7:21am, 96km south-southeast of the island at a depth of 20km.
Civil Defence says there is no immediate tsunami risk to New Zealand from the Raoul Island quake.
Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management said its scientific advisers had assessed the information and ruled out any threat to New Zealand.
"Based on current information, the initial assessment is that the earthquake is unlikely to have caused a tsunami that will pose a threat to New Zealand," the agency said in a statement.


0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Thu 26 Jun, 2014 12:42 am
Massive Earthquakes in New Zealand and Alaska May be 'Connected'

By Reissa Su | June 25, 2014 7:02 PM EST
A scientist working with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said the massive quakes that struck Alaska and the New Zealand coast may have a connection. According to David Oppenheimer, there are several times in a year that earthquakes can strike within minutes of each other.

On June 23, a magnitude 6.9 earthquake occurred off the New Zealand coast a few minutes after noon at Pacific Time. Meanwhile, a magnitude 7.9 quake struck the coast off Aleutian Islands before 2 pm Pacific Time.

The 6.9 earthquake hit near Raoul Island, a remote area in the Kermadec Islands chain of New Zealand. The epicenter is approximately 800 to 1,000 kilometers northeast of New Zealand's North Island. The initial earthquake was followed by another jolt with a 6.3 magnitude. Another quake struck 45 minutes later with a 6.2 magnitude.No damage was reported by New Zealand authorities.

In a CBS report, Oppenheimer suggested it was possible that the quake in New Zealand caused the Alaska earthquake. He said the timing can be attributed to surface waves. He explained these were the waves that travel around the circumference of the earth and arrived at about the time the earthquake struck Alaska.

But Oppenheimer said more studies are needed to validate his theory. He also said the earthquake in Alaska was bound to happen if the quake in New Zealand did not happen. Reports said the Aleutian Islands are prone to seismic activity. Historical records revealed that magnitude 7.7 or higher earthquakes have occurred at least five times since 1906 within 250 miles from the epicenter of the June 23 earthquake.

The possibility of a magnitude 9 earthquake happening in the Pacific Ocean is being studied as GNS Science will begin placing seismometers or quake warning devices on New Zealand's most threatening faults. The new earthquake devices were installed under the ocean on the Hikurangi Subduction Zone. According to GNS Science, seismologists believe the area starting 25 kilometres east of Gisborne is where the Pacific tectonic plate is forced to move below the Australian plate. The activity could be capable of causing a massive magnitude 9 earthquake similar to the one that struck Japan in 2011.

Dr Bill Fry, a GNS seismologist, said a powerful earthquake in GIsborne would be felt by much of New Zealand, including Wellington. A magnitude 9 earthquake would cause a tsunami that would reach most of the country.

http://au.ibtimes.com/articles/556961/20140625/earthquake-new-zealand-quakes-alaska.htm#.U6u_xYXnYiE
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Thu 26 Jun, 2014 12:53 am


Magnitude 9.2: The 1964 Great Alaska Earthquake is a short video relating how the largest quake in U.S. history had profound and lasting impacts on our lives. The video features USGS geologist George Plafker who, in the 1960's, correctly interpreted the quake as a subduction zone event. This was a great leap forward in resolving key mechanisms of the developing theory of plate tectonics. Loss of life and destruction from the quake and accompanying tsunamis was the impetus for things like the NOAA Tsunami Warning Centers and the USGS Earthquake Hazards Program.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Fri 27 Jun, 2014 03:48 pm
Excellent article recommended by Dr. Lucy Jones. Here's what she says about it:


Quote:
Dr. Lucy Jones
3 hrs ·
Here's an in-depth look at the Earthquake Early Warning project, and at the end, there are interesting details about the Survey that everyone should take. If you haven't yet, please do... and tell share the survey with your friends and others you care about.
http://gizmodo.com/earthquake-early-warning-systems-save-lives-so-why-don-1573781046


Earthquake Early Warning Systems Save Lives. So Why Don't We Have One?

Here's something you might not know about the 6.4 earthquake epicentered near the Pacific Coast of Mexico on May 8: By the time it hit Mexico City, 170 miles away, people there already knew it was coming. They were ready—thanks to their advanced warning system. So why doesn't the U.S. have one?
GIZMODO.COM|BY ALISSA WALKER

http://gizmodo.com/earthquake-early-warning-systems-save-lives-so-why-don-1573781046
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Fri 27 Jun, 2014 03:51 pm
@Butrflynet,
Here's a link to the survey she mentions.

https://uky.az1.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_86UyhrJ1Jwh2gtL

Quote:
Thank you for participating in this research study in cooperation with the United States Geological Survey and the University of Kentucky. We are investigating features of a USGS Earthquake Early Warning App. The purpose of this study is to find out what you think about specific features of a proposed earthquake warning smartphone app. On the next page, you are going to see an image of a smartphone app with an audio message. After you view this image, you will be asked some questions about earthquake preparedness.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Sat 28 Jun, 2014 11:19 pm
This is a highly unusual location and magnitude. It is on the border so some reports are saying the epicenter is in NM, not AZ.

M5.2 - ARIZONA

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 5.2
Date-Time
29 Jun 2014 04:59:33 UTC
28 Jun 2014 21:59:34 near epicenter
28 Jun 2014 22:59:33 standard time in your timezone
Location 32.607N 109.151W
Depth 5 km
Distances
50 km (31 mi) NW of Lordsburg, New Mexico
83 km (51 mi) WSW of Silver City, New Mexico
136 km (84 mi) WNW of Deming, New Mexico
144 km (89 mi) NNE of Douglas, Arizona
288 km (178 mi) ESE of Phoenix, Arizona
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Sun 29 Jun, 2014 02:13 pm
M7.1 - SOUTH SANDWICH ISLANDS REGION

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 7.1
Date-Time
29 Jun 2014 07:52:57 UTC
29 Jun 2014 05:52:57 near epicenter
29 Jun 2014 01:52:57 standard time in your timezone
Location 55.560S 28.570W
Depth 14 km
Distances
152 km (94 mi) NW of Visokoi Island,
2497 km (1548 mi) ESE of Ushuaia, Argentina
2687 km (1665 mi) ESE of Rio Gallegos, Argentina
2687 km (1665 mi) ESE of Puerto Deseado, Argentina
1968 km (1220 mi) ESE of Stanley, Falkland Islands
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Sun 29 Jun, 2014 02:14 pm
M6.7 - TONGA

Preliminary Earthquake Report
Magnitude 6.7
Date-Time
29 Jun 2014 17:15:08 UTC
29 Jun 2014 05:15:08 near epicenter
29 Jun 2014 11:15:08 standard time in your timezone
Location 15.043S 175.567W
Depth 10 km
Distances
205 km (127 mi) SSE of Mata-Utu, Wallis and Futuna
431 km (267 mi) WSW of Apia, Samoa
527 km (326 mi) W of Tafuna, American Samoa
530 km (328 mi) W of Pago Pago, American Samoa
562 km (348 mi) ENE of Lambasa, Fiji
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Sun 29 Jun, 2014 02:17 pm
@Butrflynet,
More on yesterday's AZ/NM quake.

Magnitude-5.2 earthquake shakes New Mexico, Arizona
Sun Jun 29, 2014 10:21am EDT

(Reuters) - A 5.2-magnitude earthquake near the border of Arizona and New Mexico rattled a significant swath of the U.S. Southwest late Saturday but caused no major damage or injuries, the United States Geological Survey said.

The earthquake was centered about 31 miles (50 km) northwest of the city of Lordsburg, New Mexico, and could be felt some 150 miles (240 km) west in the city of Tucson, Arizona, and 300 miles east (480 km) in Roswell, New Mexico, the USGS and local media reported.

The quake hit at 9.59 p.m. local time at a depth of about 3 miles (5 km) and was followed by two small aftershocks, the USGS said.

It knocked pictures from walls and caused light fixtures to swing, local media reported. It also prompted scores of people across the region to call 911.

In the southeastern Arizona town of Thatcher, residents saw roads and structures swaying.

"It just kept shaking and shaking, and I grabbed the arm of the girl next to me," Jennifer Taylor, a dispatcher for the Graham County Sheriff's Office, told KPHO-TV. "We went out to the patio and looked up and our radio tower was shaking."

In El Paso, Texas, about 150 miles (240 km) east of the epicenter along Interstate 10, local officials tweeted that staff inside the El Paso International Airport control tower said they felt the quake.
 

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