Moderate quake strikes off Northern Calif.; no tsunami generated
EUREKA, Calif. >> A moderate earthquake with a magnitude of 5.7 has struck off the coast of Northern California.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake shook at 1:08 p.m. Wednesday (11:08 a.m. in Hawaii) about 40 miles southwest of Eureka, at an estimated depth of more than 10 miles.
Lt. Wayne Hanson of the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office said no damage or injuries were immediately reported.
Geological survey spokeswoman Leslie Gordon said the preliminary magnitude of 5.7 could change slightly.
People reported feeling it as far away as Red Bluff, 159 miles to the east. Many took to Twitter to report the shaking.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center on Oahu issued no advisory on the quake, and the National Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska, said no tsunami was expected.
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Last March, one of the largest earthquakes to hit California in decades rattled the state’s northern coast, but its depth and distance from shore reduced the impact on land, where there were no reports of injuries or damage, scientists and authorities said. That magnitude-6.8 quake struck March 10 and was centered 50 miles west of Eureka.