2017 Costa Rica earthquake
The 2017 Costa Rica earthquake occurred 16 kilometres southeast of Jacó, which is about 100 kilometres southwest of the capital, San Jose[2] on November 12, 2017. At first, the quake was measured at a magnitude of 6.8, it was a magnitude 6.5 earthquake with a max intensity of VIII (Severe) on the Mercalli intensity scale.[3] The quake was felt most severely in the provincial districts of Quepos, Parrita and Garabito—of which Jacó is capital.[4] The earthquake, which was felt throughout Costa Rica, and in parts of Nicaragua and Panama, killed at least 3 people.[5][6] Also, it was followed by more than 20 aftershocks throughout the night, the first measuring 5.1 just four minutes after the first quake.[7]
Damage
Electricity was knocked out in some areas. There was no major infrastructure damage from the tremor that hit the lightly populated area.[2] At least one building in Jacó had been evacuated due to apparent damage and there were reports of walls collapsing and objects falling in other parts of the country.[4] South Jacó had lost power lines and there were downed poles. There were landslides due to the quake that had caused a blockage on the highway from Jacó to other cities.[8]
References
- ^ ANSS: Costa Rica 2017 (accessed May 8, 2018).
- ^ a b Cordoba, Javier (13 November 2017). "Costa Rica Hit by 6.5-Magnitude Quake". Toronto Star.
- ^ ANSS. "Costa Rica 2017: M 6.5 - 16km SE of Jaco, Costa Rica". Comprehensive Catalog. U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved 2018-05-08.
- ^ a b Cullinane, Susannah (13 November 2017). "Costa Rica Hit by Magnitude 6.5 Earthquake". CNN.
- ^ ANSS: Costa Rica 2017, Did you feel it? .
- ^ "Three Dead From Sunday Night's Earthquake". Q Costa Rica. 2017-11-13. Retrieved 2017-11-13.
- ^ Ivetteromero (14 November 2017). "Magnitude 6.5 Earthquake Strikes off Costa Rican Coast".
- ^ Gaffey, Conor (13 November 2017). "There's Been Another Strong Earthquake, This Time in Costa Rica". Newsweek.
External links
- The International Seismological Centre has a bibliography and/or authoritative data for this event.
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- Tripura, India (5.7, January 3)
- Amatrice, Italy (5.7, January 18) †
- Bougainville, Papua New Guinea (7.9, January 22)
- Uttarakhand, India (5.1, February 6)
- Surigao del Norte, Philippines (6.5, February 10)
- Central, Botswana (6.5, April 3)
- Batangas, Philippines
- 5.1, April 4
- 5.9, April 8
- Valparaiso, Chile (6.9, April 24)
- Taxkorgan, China
- 5.4, May 10
- Lesbos, Greece
- 6.3, June 12
- San Marcos, Guatemala
- 6.9, June 14
- Leyte, Philippines
- 6.5, July 6
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- Aegean Sea
- 6.6, July 20
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- 6.5, August 8
- Jinghe, Xinjiang, China
- 6.3, August 8
- Ischia, Italy
- 4.2, August 21
- Ryanggang, North Korea (6.3, September 3)
- Chiapas, Mexico (8.1, September 8) †
- Puebla, Mexico (7.1, September 19) †
- Kermanshah, Iran (7.3, November 12) † ‡
- Jacó, Costa Rica (6.5, November 13)
- Pohang, South Korea (5.4, November 15)
- Java, Indonesia (6.5, December 15)
- † indicates earthquake resulting in at least 30 deaths
- ‡ indicates the deadliest earthquake of the year
- Dates for all earthquakes are in UTC
- Additional information at [[1]]
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