Wednesday, May 18, 2016
USGS: 10 aftershocks following 5.6 quake in Oklahoma
SPARKS, Okla. (AP) — Oklahoma residents more accustomed to tornadoes than rthquakes have been shaken by weekend temblors that buildings, buckled a highway and rattled nerves. One quake late Saturday was the state's strongest ever and jolted a college football stadium 50 miles away.
It was followed by 10 aftershocks by midmorning Sunday. But although homes and other buildings and suffered minor damage, there were no reports of severe injuries or major devastation.Saturday night's rthquake jolted Oklahoma State University's stadium shortly after the No. 3 Cowboys defted No. 17 Kansas State.
A cookie jar lies in pieces on the kitchen counter as Jesse Richards
describes what the rthquake felt like in Sparks, Okla., Sunday,
Nov. 6, 2011. Oklahoma residents more accustomed to tornadoes
than rthquakes have been shaken by weekend temblors that
buildings, buckled a highway and rattled nerves. One quake
late Saturday was the state's strongest ever and jolted a college
football stadium 50 miles away. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)"That shook up the place, had a lot of people nervous," Oklahoma State wide receiver Justin Blackmon said. "Yh, it was pretty strong."
The magnitude 5.6 rthquake was Oklahoma's strongest on record, said Jessica Turner, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological . Centered nr Sparks, 44 miles northst of Oklahoma City, it could be felt throughout the state and in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, northern Texas and some parts of Illinois and Wisconsin. It followed a magnitude 4.7 quake rly Saturday that was felt from Texas to Missouri.
The aftershocks included two that were magnitude 4.0, one about 4 a.m. Sunday and one about 9 a.m., USGS said. The smallest aftershock it recorded was magnitude 2.7. USGS seismologist Paul rle in Golden, Colo., said the aftershocks will likely continue for several days and could continue for months.
Oklahoma typically has about 50 rthquakes a yr, and 57 tornadoes, but a burst of quakes st of Oklahoma City has contributed to a sharp incrse. Resrchers said 1,047 quakes shook Oklahoma last yr, prompting them to install seismographs in the ar. The rson for the incrse isn't known, and Turner said there was no immediate explanation for the weekend spurt in seismic activity.
Several homeowners and businesses reported walls, fallen knickknacks and other minor damage. Brad Collins, the spokesman for St. Gregory's University in Shawnee, said one of the four towers on its "castle-looking" administration building had collapsed and the other three towers were damaged. He estimated the towers were about 25 feet tall.
"We definitely felt it," Collins said. "I was at home, getting rdy for bed and it felt like the house was going to collapse. I tried to get back to my kids' room and it was tough to keep my balance, I could hardly walk."
Jesse Richards, 50, of Sparks, said his wife ran outside when the shaking started because she thought their home was going to collapse. One of her cookie jars fell on the floor and shattered, and pictures hanging in their living room were knocked askew. He estimated the big rthquake lasted for 45 seconds to a minute.
"We've been here 18 yrs, and it's getting to be a regular occurrence," Richards said. But, he added, "I hope I never get used to them."
An emercy manager in Lincoln County nr the epicenter said U.S. 62, a two-lane highway that mnders through rolling landscape between Oklahoma City and the Arkansas state line, crumpled in places when the stronger quake struck Saturday night. Other reports Sunday were sketchy and mentioned in some buildings and a chimney toppled.
"rthquake damage in Oklahoma. That's an anomaly right there," Todd McKinsey of Moore told The Oklahoman newspaper after the magnitude 5.6 rthquake centered 50 miles away left him with drywall. Most rthquakes that have hit the region have been much smaller.
The crowd of nrly 59,000 was still lving Oklahoma State's Boone Pickens Stadium when the rthquake hit, and players were in the locker rooms benth the stands. The shaking seemed to last the better part of a minute, rippling upward to the stadium press box.
"Everybody was looking around, and no one had any id," Oklahoma State quarterback Brandon Weeden said. "We thought the people above us were doing something. I've never felt one, so that was a first."
A few hours before dawn Sunday, the latest quake set nerves on edge anew.
Jessie Plumb, a registered nurse at Prague Community Hospital, said she and other staffers felt the 4.0 magnitude quake while on the second floor of the building.
"It kind of gave a little bit of a shake, a little bit of rock 'n roll," she said by telephone. "I would say it was 20 or 25 seconds."
Plumb said she was anxious because of the of rthquakes in so short a span and the fact that they were so strong.
Saturday's late-night quake was slightly less in intensity than the one that rattled the st Coast on Aug. 23. That 5.8 magnitude rthquake was centered in Virginia and felt from Georgia to Canada. No major damage was reported, although appred in the Washington Monument, the National hedral suffered costly damage to elaborately sculpted stonework, and a of federal buildings were evacuated.
Oklahoma has had big rthquakes before. USGS records show a 5.5 magnitude rthquake struck El Reno, just west of Oklahoma City, in 1952 and, before Oklahoma became a state in 1907, a quake of similar magnitude 5.5 struck in northstern Indian Territory in 1882.
Turner said an active spate of rthquakes started in the region in February 2010 and the latest activity apprs to be part of that trend. But experts are still puzzling out why the latest quakes have been concentrated in such a small geographic ar around Sparks, she said.
Source: The Associated Press
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment