Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Earthquake rattles Southern California, no damage reported
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A magnitude 4.7 earthquake struck deep beneath a mountain range in Southern California on Monday, jangling the nerves of tennis stars competing in the nearby desert town of Indian Wells and rattling urban areas as far away as Los Angeles, but no damage or injuries were reported.
Automated sensors initially reported the quake as a flurry of three tremors in rapid succession at magnitudes of 5.1 or higher, but seismic strength was quickly downgraded to between 4.6 and 4.7 before scientists determined that only a single quake of that size had actually occurred.
Susan Hough, a seismologist for the U.S. Geological Survey in Pasadena, said the agency's real-time quake-reporting system was "confused" by a 2.3 magnitude foreshock that preceded the main jolt by 16 seconds, and a 3.2 aftershock less than a minute later.
The main quake, which hit shortly before 10 a.m. local time about 22 miles (35 km) south of the resort town of Palm Springs, ended up being followed by about 100 very small aftershocks, she said.
The principal tremor occurred about 6 to 8 miles (12 to 14 km) beneath the San Jacinto Mountains, a granite range towering over California's southern desert, on a branch of an active fault line named for the mountain, Hough said.
Quakes of similar size typically generate too little ground motion to cause any property damage.
"If you were sitting right on top of a 4.7, it might have knocked some things off the wall," she told Reuters, but centred in the mountains as it was, "we'd expect little or no damage." None was reported, she said.
But the quake proved a distraction for some of the tennis players competing at the BNP Paribas Open in the nearby desert community of Indian Wells.
"We just had an earthquake!!!," Russian pro Maria Kirilenko exclaimed in a Twitter message from the elite ATP Masters 1000 event. "Suddenly everything start moving, I was holding the walls in my room not to fall! OMG"
Two-time champion Rafael Nadal of Spain later told reporters he was startled by the tremor, the first he had ever experienced.
"I was very scared," Nadal said, smiling. "I was on the massage table preparing for my warm-up. I think the massage table moves even more."
"I finish the earthquake, and my legs were like this," he grinned, wobbling his legs.
Light rattling or rumbling was reported felt about 60 miles (97 km) to the south in San Diego and about 100 miles (161 km) to the northwest in Los Angeles, where some high-rise buildings swayed slightly.
Hough said the state of California overall averages about eight magnitude 5.0 earthquakes a year over the long term.
(Additional reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes, Dan Whitcomb, Cynthia Johnston and Nichola Groom; Editing by Richard Chang and Eric Walsh)
- The best ways to national unity
- Officers find illegal farms cleared of workers and machines
- Land clearing done legally, says Adnan

- ‘Boycott will be self-defeating’
- Zahid: I will not interfere with decisions of HODs

- Rape accused defends marriage to 13-year-old, says it was mutual
- Wee: MCA shouldn’t join Government
- Court: Sosma not applicable to Yazid and two others
- Enough documents for Lahad Datu case

- Government looks into broader base for broadband
- Group upset over man marrying underage victim
- Group lodges report after missing gold bars
- Indonesian who brought mum to Penang for treatment falls to her death
- AirAsia: Child not allowed on board because of chicken pox
- Liow accepts apology from Astro AEC host
- Maybank KE Research maintains Buy on Gamuda, TP RM5.30
- British PM tells Google and others to play fair on paying tax
- Trading ideas: Pos Malaysia, BToto, Notion Vtech
- Malaysia-Market factors to watch on May 21(Tuesday)
- Wall Street ends flat on correction worries
- Raytheon to sign US$2.1bil arms sale to Oman
- Report: iPhone maker Apple keeping billions of dollars in Irish subsidiaries to avoid taxes
- Revival of abandoned RM1.4bil 79-storey Plaza Rakyat near Pudu bus terminal
- Wahid: M’sia growth prospects still bright, will be driven by Govt identified projects
- UBS predicts Malaysia’s 2013 GDP at below 5%
- Pharmaniaga enters into joint venture with Saudi firm
- MAHB sees 10% rise in KLIA passenger numbers from last year's 39.9mil
- RM1.7bil Maju Expressway deal crashes
- Shangri-La Hotels optimistic about its performance
- Kudsia elected president of Commercial Radio Malaysia
- Plenty for Hafizh as 55 is significant in his early racing career
- Yi Ting on a mission
- Razif: Indiscipline the cause of senior players’ poor performances
- Cool V Shem believes he will be too hot for rivals to handle
- Spirited Malaysian team vow to deliver against Germans
- Japan hope to reach their first semis in tourney
- KLHC to rule the roost if other teams don’t raise their game
- Malaysia have their work cut out in the World League
- Gobi’s fate to be decided by MHC’s administrative committee
- Andre nails it with last jump
- Grace hammers home a point with two golds
- Delia one step away from main draw after easy win
- Sharon believes KPT circuit is excellent for squash’s future
- Nadal and Williams are looking unbeatable leaving rivals stunned
- Reigning champion thumps Xu Xin as Taiwan make history with first gold
- Rape accused defends marriage to 13-year-old, says it was mutual
- The best ways to national unity
- Wee: MCA shouldn’t join Government
- ‘Boycott will be self-defeating’
- Zahid: I will not interfere with decisions of HODs
- Officers find illegal farms cleared of workers and machines
- AirAsia: Child not allowed on board because of chicken pox
- Land clearing done legally, says Adnan
- Mustapa against call to boycott products of Chinese firms
- Enough documents for Lahad Datu case
- Rape accused defends marriage to 13-year-old, says it was mutual
- Revival of abandoned RM1.4bil 79-storey Plaza Rakyat near Pudu bus terminal
- The best ways to national unity
- Zahid: I will not interfere with decisions of HODs
- Malindo set to operate from Subang Skypark
- Report: iPhone maker Apple keeping billions of dollars in Irish subsidiaries to avoid taxes
- TH Plantations hopes for soft loan from timber board
- English-medium schools needed for nation-building
- A lose-lose situation indeed
- No real efforts to nab the culprits

