June 19, 2005
Yahoo News
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A magnitude 5 earthquake struck off Northern California's coast on Sunday, the fifth moderate or strong tremor to hit the state in a week, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
"It was just another aftershock 125 miles off the coast. Nobody that I'm aware of felt it," John Minsch, a geophysicist at the
USGS National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colorado, told Reuters.
The quake struck at 2:27 a.m. PDT (0927 GMT) and its epicenter was 282 miles northwest of San Francisco, the USGS said.
The strongest of the recent California quakes had a magnitude of 7.2 and hit just north of Sunday's epicenter on Tuesday. It was followed by a quake of magnitude 6.6 on Thursday in the same area.
"Ordinarily, aftershocks get smaller in magnitude and decrease in frequency over time," Minsch said.
Tuesday's quake prompted a brief tsunami warning for the entire U.S. West Coast and part of Canada.
A patchwork of faults crisscrosses California, and the Southern California Earthquake Center recently estimated a major earthquake beneath Los Angeles, the state's largest city, could cause up to 18,000 deaths and $250 billion in damage.
Two other quakes in the past week had inland epicenters in Southern California.
On Thursday, a magnitude 4.9 earthquake shattered glass and jostled shelves in the immediate vicinity of its epicenter near Yucaipa, 79 miles east of Los Angeles.
A 5.2 quake shook the Anza area of Riverside County on June 12.
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