Strong 6.1 magnitude quake rocks southern Mexico

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Pastor Dale Morgan

unread,
Jul 6, 2007, 3:30:22 PM7/6/07
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
*Great Earthquakes In Diverse Places

Strong 6.1 magnitude quake rocks southern Mexico*

By Frank Jack Daniel
Reuters
Friday, July 6, 2007; 1:10 AM

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - A forceful 6.1 magnitude earthquake shook two
poor southern Mexican farming states on Thursday, scaring residents but
apparently causing no injuries or damage, authorities said.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake struck 24 miles from Tuxtla
Gutierrez, the capital of the coffee-growing state of Chiapas, and just
over the border from the state of Oaxaca. Both states are largely rural
regions with strong indigenous populations.

The Mexican government said shockwaves from the quake were felt hundreds
of miles away.

Emergency services said people were panicked by the temblor, which
knocked out power and mobile telephone services for about 10 minutes
when it hit just after 8 p.m local time

(0100 GMT).

"We felt it hard here," said ambulance worker Hernan Meza in the Chiapas
town of Cintalapa, close to the epicenter. "It's something I hadn't felt
for a long time."

Cintalapa has a population of about 74,000 people and is surrounded by
coffee and corn plantations.

The civil protection agency in Chiapas said it was sweeping the area to
look for material damage around the epicenter, close to the border with
Oaxaca.

Emergency services in both states said no injuries were initially
reported after the 78-mile (125-km) deep quake.

In Oaxaca, the earthquake shook hardest in the hot and windy low-lying
Isthmus region, dominated by the Zapotec Indians and known for long,
raucous street parties and parades.

"Some people were alarmed, it was very strong," said Oaxacan emergency
worker Gilberto Lopez.

The small oil port of Salina Cruz is located on the Isthmus' Pacific coast.

Chiapas is home to a large population of ethnic Mayas and was thrust
into the international spotlight when the Zapatista guerrilla army
launched a short but bloody uprising in 1994.

Large areas are still under partial guerrilla control.

The state, Mexico's main coffee growing region, was badly hit by
landslides and flooding following Hurricane Stan in 2005.

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages