Magnitude 4.5 Quake Hits Near Los Angeles
No Reports Of Injuries Or Damage; Epicenter On San Bernardino
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A 4.5 magnitude earthquake struck San Bernardino, Calif., about 50 miles from downtown Los Angeles late Thursday, Jan. 8, 2009, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. (CBS/AP)
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The U.S. Geological Survey measured a 4.5-magnitude quake at 7:49 p.m. just south of San Bernardino, about 55 miles east of Los Angeles. The USGS initially reported the quake at 4.9-magnitude, then 5.0.
"It was a little roll and big jolt, then a sonic boom kind of noise," said San Bernardino County Fire Supervisor Tim Franke.
While no damage was reported, it shook up people across the region. Citizen reports to the USGS showed the quake was felt as far south as San Diego and as far north as the Palmdale area.
"Nothing fell here except a few oil cans," said Socorro Ruiz, an employee at an AMPM convenience store in San Bernardino. "We were a little scared, with the ground going up and down underneath us. It sounded like something noisy was going on in the basement."
The quake disturbed dinner for about 120 people at the nearby Castaway Restaurant, said manager Ignacio Coyt. He said he felt a "very quick jolt." No one panicked but he said one couple left to check out any damage.
"It felt like something dropped from the roof," Coyt said.
To the south in Orange County, a librarian at the Yorba Linda Public Library said she felt shaking but was thankful she didn't have much to clean up.
We didn't even have any books fall. We only felt it for about a second.
Julie Zeoli, LibrarianThe quake struck 10 miles deep near the San Jacinto fault, which is part of the San Andreas Fault system, said seismologist Lucy Jones of the U.S. Geological Survey. At least half a dozen smaller aftershocks followed including a magnitude-3.3 that rattled the region an hour later.
"It's unlikely that there's going to be damage," USGS seismologist Egill Haukksson said at a news conference. "The earthquake is fairly deep. ... People might have noticed it and feel upset about the shaking, but we don't expect structural damage from this size quake."
The San Jacinto fault cuts through the fast-growing city of San Bernardino west of City Hall. The city, home to more than 200,000 people, has about 100 unreinforced masonry buildings that are prone to damage during a big quake, Jones said.
The quake was the latest moderate temblor to hit the region in recent months. A 5.1-magnitude hit a sparsely populated area of the Mojave Desert in early December. In July a magnitude-5.4 quake centered in the hills east of Los Angeles was the strongest to rattle a populated area of Southern California since the 1994 Northridge disaster.
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- I lived for years in Palm Springs where you don''t get out of bed for less than a 7.0!
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- "The last damaging quake was around ''89, or so, called the loma prieta or something like it."
Not quite-Several have hit California since 1989,
with the 1994 Northridge Earthquake being the
most notable. - Reply to this comment
- I remember my grandmother, who had moved to California from tornado alley, in response to her family''s fears about earthquakes: "At least the weather don''t kill ya."
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- I left L.A. back in 1988 after the Whittier Narrows Quake in ''87, which was initially reported at 6.0, but later revised to 5.9. It did major damage all around my place in Arcadia, and some very cool old landmarks were completely destroyed.
I''ll never move back, but I do miss the restaurants and nighttime entertainment. None finer anywhere. - Reply to this comment
- DaVicar3 and docpeter1953: She''s already changed her posting name yet again. And yes, she''s already commented today as mrs zambesi--she was going after the mudslides in Washington.
And yes, a 4.5 is a yawner out there. - Reply to this comment
- Let''s face it it''s dicey living on aknown fault line like living below sea level in New Orleans some things are predictable like ponting a loaded gun at your head half drunk no pity in this corner, though I have friends out there and they love it.
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- I must admit I am surprised that ms_premise hasn''t responded yet with, "This is God''s retibution, it is because of all those sinners making porn movies around Lost Angels."
Maybe it is too early in the morning for ms_premise? - Reply to this comment
- If a big enough wide-spread quake were to hit, it could wipe out the economy entirely. We''''d be back to bartering and using beads for money.
Posted by rf35 at 02:57 AM : Jan 09, 2009
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Beads I got, left over from the 1960s. - Reply to this comment
- Until the earth quakes stop here califonia Iam ordering all landscapers to halt work and take a extended vaction until we can get a grip on these things. Governor, Ahhnold
Posted by tootall1014 at 08:02 AM : Jan 09, 2009
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He didn''t order them to return to Mexico, where its safe? ;-) Yes I am being facetious. - Reply to this comment
- 4.5 is a yawner in california. the last damaging quake was around ''89, or so, called the loma prieta or something like it. the worst ever was the ''06 san francisco quake. good thing about a quake is you know in no time whether you made it or not, like less than a minute but it''s a long, frightening minute.
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