Strong
Earthquake Jolts Central Taiwan
An
earthquake in central Taiwan sends residents running into the streets
and causes some damage, but no casualties are reported.
2
May, 2013
A
magnitude 6.2 earthquake has struck the island of Taiwan, the US
Geological Survey says.
The
quake caused some damage and sent residents running into the streets,
but there were no immediate reports of casualties.
It
struck at a depth of nine miles (14.5 kilometres), the agency said.
The
magnitude had originally been reported at 6.6 but it was later
downgraded.
Taiwan
television said the quake had triggered a gas explosion in the centre
of the island but it gave no details.
Shoppers
screamed and ran out of a 12-storey department store that shook
violently for nearly a minute, TV stations reported from the central
city of Taichung, near the epicentre.
The
quake also rattled the island's capital of Taipei, about 150 miles
(250 kilometres) north of the epicentre, swaying buildings.
"The
house was shaking but nothing fell," said one resident of the
city.
The
island sits near the so-called ring of fire region of seismic
activity around the Pacific Ocean, and is frequently rattled by
quakes.
A
magnitude-7.6 earthquake in central Taiwan in 1999 killed more than
2,300 people.
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