Magnitude 7.6 - OAXACA, MEXICO
This earthquake struck within the last hour and there are reports of buildings shaking in as far away as Mexico City.
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Magnitude 7.6 - OAXACA, MEXICO
This earthquake struck within the last hour and there are reports of buildings shaking in as far away as Mexico City.
SourceQuote:
A strong, long 7.6 earthquake with an epicenter in Guerrero state shook central southern Mexico on Tuesday, swaying buildings in Mexico City and sending frightened workers and residents into the streets.
The U.S. Geological Survey set the intensity at 7.6 at a depth of 11 miles underground. Mexico's National Seismological Survey said the temblor had an epicenter southwest of Ometepec. The quake was located 120 miles east of Acapulco.
Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard's Twitter account said the water system and other "strategic services" were not experiencing problems.
A person at Acapulco City Hall told NBC News that they felt the quake but had no immediate reports of injuries or damages.
No damage was reported in Oaxaca, near where the quake hit, according to local television.
Earlier the quake had been reported at 7.9 magnitude. No tsunami was expected.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
Yeah, two threads were made within 1 minute of each other. So I merged them.
Didn't feel a thing here in San Diego; usually we get some of those tremors out here when something as big as that happens.
So does this mean that there won't be a 7.something earthquake due in California by March 22, or is this not the one geologists predicted last week?
California is always ready to blow in terms of earthquakes, no matter the geological distance between it and an earthquake elsewhere in the world. Considering how far away this earthquake was from the San Andreas fault, I doubt it "stole" the big earthquake.
Y'know, the San Andreas is massive; it's quite likely that this quake that hit yesterday is actually a Foreshock to the predicted event.
The San Andreas fault is indeed massive, but it's not *that* massive. There's another fault line running along Mexico's southern coastline, where this earthquake hit, but the name escapes me at the moment.