Did you feel it? 4.23 earthquake shakes Northern Nevada
An earthquake centered 7 miles northeast of Reno shook Northern Nevada on Monday night. The 4.23 magnitude earthquake shook the region at 5:51 p.m. It was centered around the Sun Valley area and felt in Carson City, Douglas and Lyon counties as well as the Lake Tahoe area, according to the U.S. Geological Survey and Nevada Seismological Laboratory.
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Here's a news release from UNR's Mike Wolterbeek reporting on Monday's quake from the Nevada Seismological Laboratory:
RENO, Nev. – The Nevada Seismological Laboratory reports a Magnitude 4.2 earthquake located just north of Spanish Springs, Nev. at 5:51 p.m. There have been a few unconfirmed reports of minor damage. This quake is the largest in a sequence in that area that began five days ago and was preceded by a M2.4 at about 5:30 p.m.
There have been several small swarms of earthquakes in the area north of Reno during 2013. The Magnitude 4.2 Spanish Springs earthquake occurred in the same area as a small swarm of earthquakes that took place in October 2012.
“Activity began again in this same location on August 21 leading to today’s felt event,” Ken Smith, associate director of the Nevada Seismological Laboratory at the University of Nevada, Reno, said. “This earthquake has been followed by several aftershocks, which is typical of earthquakes of this size in the northern Nevada region.
“It’s always a possibility, yet just as unlikely, that this event may be a foreshock to a larger event that may occur near the same location, and citizens in the north Reno area should remain on alert for additional ground shaking. How this series of earthquakes will evolve cannot be predicted or forecast.”
The event was felt as far away as the western Sierra foothills and to the east in Fallon, Nevada, with some reports from as far away as Sacramento and Susanville, Calif. It was 8.6 miles below the surface.
A series of small aftershocks between M1.4 and 1.7 have occurred following the 5:51 p.m. earthquake.
Updated information for activity associated with this earthquake is available here.
The Nevada-Eastern California region has a history of large damaging earthquakes and citizens should always consider earthquake preparedness. Information is available at the Great Nevada Shakeout website, www.shakeout.org/nevada/.
The Nevada Seismological Laboratory, a public service department at the University of Nevada, Reno, is a member of the USGS Advanced National Seismic System and operates a network of about 150 real-time seismograph stations throughout the region providing earthquake information to Nevada citizens, the USGS, and local and state officials.
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