No reports of injury or damage after Surf City earthquake
Jose Paul Corona
A magnitude-2.9 earthquake shook Surf City at 4:26 on Monday
morning.
The quake originated 11.7 miles beneath the Earth’s surface in
Huntington Beach, according to Caltech and the U.S. Geological
Survey. Its epicenter was four miles west-northwest of Newport Beach
and five miles southeast of Bolsa Chica State Beach.
Huntington Beach Police Sgt. Gary Meza said he felt the tremor,
but there were no reports of any injuries or damage.
The Newport-Inglewood Rose Canyon fault runs under the city
somewhat parallel to the coast. There is no way to tell, however, if
the quake originated from that fault, said Anthony Guarino, seismic
analyst at Caltech.
“Without any surface rupture we would not be able to tell,”
Guarino said. “The magnitude of this quake is such that no surface
rupture would occur.”
Various environmentally sensitive areas, such as wetlands, are
near the fault line but there is no way to determine if life there
has been affected, he said.
There have been other earthquakes of this magnitude near the
wetlands in the past.
Monday’s quake was felt from Cypress to Garden Grove, up to Long
Beach and Bellflower and south to Newport Beach, Guarino added.
Linda Moon, president of Amigos de Bolsa Chica felt the quake, but
isn’t worried about it affecting the wetlands.
“A quake of that intensity wouldn’t create that much damage,” she
said.
While there weren’t any damage reports, Moon said that if
construction were to take place at the wetlands, specifically on the
mesa, earthquake damage could be significant.
“We seriously underestimate the proximity with living close to
earthquake faults,” she said.
The last significant earthquake in Southern California was a
5.1-magnitude quake in Anza on Oct. 30, 2001, according to the U.S.
Geological Survey.
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