Not the ‘Big One’

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Broken bottles and other goods in a store in Lake Isabella, California after a 6.4 magnitude quake hit Southern California in this handout picture obtained courtesy of Rex Emerson taken on July 4. Photo: AFP

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Broken bottles and other goods in a store in Lake Isabella, California after a 6.4 magnitude quake hit Southern California in this handout picture obtained courtesy of Rex Emerson taken on July 4. Photo: AFP

California rocked by strongest quake in two decades

LOS ANGELES: Southern California was rocked by its largest earthquake in two decades on Thursday, a 6.4-magnitude trembler that caused “substantial damage” at a military facility but otherwise only minor injuries in the sparsely populated area.

The shallow quake, followed by dozens of aftershocks, struck in the Mojave Desert 10km from the small city of Ridgecrest at 10:33am.

It was felt 160 miles away in Los Angeles and even as far afield as Las Vegas in the neighbouring state of Nevada, as the United States celebrated its July 4 Independence Day holiday.

Although the quake in the most populous US state of California revived fears of the “Big One” — a powerful tremor along the San Andreas Fault that could devastate major cities in Southern California — President Trump was quick to reassure that this wasn’t it.

“All seems to be very much under control!” he tweeted two hours after the quake in the Searles Valley of San Bernardino County.

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The area “will continue having a lot of aftershocks,” some maybe as strong as magnitude five, California Institute of Technology seismologist Lucy Jones told a press conference.

The earthquake was the largest in Southern California since 1999 when a 7.1-magnitude quake struck the Twentynine Palms Marine Corps base, according to The Los Angeles Times.

Thursday’s epicentre was in or on the edge of the US Navy’s sprawling desert bomb testing range known as China Lake.

The Naval Air Weapons Station covers 1.1 million acres and strictly controls the airspace above it. Inside, the Navy develops and tests missiles, bombs, artillery shells and other war ordnance, and the aircraft used to deliver it.

An official at China Lake told AFP there was “substantial damage” to their facilities, including fires, water leaks and spills of hazardous materials.

Paul Dale, the station’s commanding officer, said later at a news conference that officials were making “damage assessments,” and declined to elaborate.

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David Witt, the fire chief in Kern County which includes Ridgecrest, reported “minor, minor injuries,” stemming from broken glass and shelves falling down in supermarkets.

He was not able to provide an exact number of casualties.

The San Bernardino County Fire Department said that “buildings and roads have sustained varying degrees of damage”.

This included “buildings with minor cracks, broken water mains, power lines down, rock slides on certain roads”.

The quake struck at a depth of 10.7km in the vast desert region.

Residents told local TV that the shaking set off panic, while sending televisions plunging to the ground and causing drawers to fall open.

AFP reporters in Los Angeles clearly felt the earthquake for about 10 seconds.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said there was no significant damage in the second-largest US city. – AFP

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