This is one in a string of strong earthquakes in the past week
Powerful
7.3 earthquake strikes along the coast of Colombia: the fifth 7.0
magnitude quake to strike in 45 days
30
September, 2012
A
strong 7.3 magnitude earthquake struck along the coast of Colombia at
a depth of 162.1 km (100.7 miles). The epicenter of the earthquake
was 62 km (39 miles) S (176°) from Popayan, Colombia and 345 km (214
miles) from QUITO, Ecuador.
According
to USGS statistics, about fifteen 7.0 magnitude earthquakes occur
each year but there have been five such high intensity earthquakes
reported across the planet in the last 45 days, provided the USGS
does not downgrade today’s quake further.
On
August 14, a 7.7 magnitude earthquake was reported in Sea
of Okhotsk near NE Russia; on August 27, a 7.3 magnitude
earthquake struck off the coast of El
Salvador; on August 31, a 7.6 magnitude earthquake struck near
the Philippine
Islands, and on September 5, a 7.6 magnitude earthquake struck
off the coast of Costa
Rica.
Today’s
earthquake was originally registered as a 7.4 by the USGS.
The
director of Colombia’s disaster relief service, Carlos Ivan
Marquez, said that there were only reports of minor damage to homes
in one village.
The
temblor shook buildings and rattled windows in 10 central and western
provinces, but despite police and firefighters reported no damage.
The
quake also shook Ecuador’s capital Quito and other parts of the
country for about 30 seconds, and was felt particularly in tall
buildings in the capital.
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