This AP video shows the eruption of a quake in Guatemala City, Guatemala:
It was 6.0 on the Richter Scale and rocked Guatemala and parts of El Salvador on Monday, but no damage was reported.
On Sunday a 6.3 earthquake was reported in the South Atlantic, just near Argentina. The Latin American Herald Tribune reports:
The earthquake occurred some 380 kilometers (236 miles) south-southeast of Ushuaia, the capital of Tierra del Fuego, in the Drake Passage at a depth of 25 kilometers (15 miles).
Again, no word of damage or a tsunami warning.
Venezuela was struck by a 5.6 Richter Scale earthquake, Friday of last week, and right on the heels of the 7.0 Haiti Earthquake. According to NPR (National Public Radio), it hit near the coastal town of Carupano, Venezuela, which is just 813 miles from Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
View Larger Map
A point six miles below and 10 miles from Port-au-Prince was the epicenter of Tuesday's 7.0 Haiti Earthquake, which left thousands of victims.
The US Geological Survey reports that the quake hit 7.3 miles below the ground in a region called Sucre, Venezuela.
There's no word of damage; just reports of people scared and shaken up.
The last large quake in Venezuela was in September 2008; it was 6.2 on the Richter Scale.
There's no word if these quake events in South and Central America and the Carribean - all close to each other - are in some way related, as of this writing. But the timing alone would seem a good reason to investigate what's happening.
Stay tuned.
An absolutely unspeakable tragedy. I hope all the donations help save some lives!
ReplyDeleteHow many miles are in between the heart of the earthquakes in guatemala and haiti? Please answer!!!
ReplyDelete