A major earthquake struck south of Cuba on Tuesday, sending shockwaves as far as Miami and sparking panic in the Cayman Islands where it ripped open sinkholes, but did not do serious damage to people or property, initial reports said.
The magnitude 7.7 quake hit in the sea between Jamaica, the Cayman Islands and Cuba, at a depth of 6.2 miles (10 km). Several aftershocks, including one of 6.1 magnitude much nearer to the Cayman Islands, followed the principal quake.
Cindi Welcome, 27, a trainee travel agent in the Cayman capital George Town, said she first thought her blood pressure was playing up when the tremors struck. Then she screamed.
“The building was shaking like paper,” she said. “The panic was real. This was the worst we have ever felt.”
Residents reported drains blowing open and sinkholes appearing, one of which swallowed half a car, said Jewel Hydes, a 44-year-old risk manager on the islands.
“It was really, really horrific. Everyone on the island is still in shock,” Hydes said. “We kept seeing tons of people praying, running out of buildings, ‘cause they were swaying.”
In Miami, Florida, several downtown buildings were evacuated as office workers streamed outdoors to safety. Miami personal injury attorney Eli Stiers was in his 29th-floor office when he suddenly started feeling queasy.
“I was like: ‘Did I have some bad sushi?’” he said. Then he noticed his office door swinging back and forth. “We were like, did a plane hit the building? A sinkhole open up? Then it hit us that it was an earthquake. You don’t expect that in Miami.”
To varying degrees, that message was repeated across the region, despite the strength of the quake.
Angie Watler, a spokeswoman for police on Cayman Brac, the island nearest the epicenter, said members of the public had reported some damage to buildings and to a swimming pool at the Carib Sands resort on the south of the island.
Videos from Jamaica and the Caymans showed water sloshing out of pools during the quake.
Watler said there were no reports so far of injuries but that authorities were still making checks.
The International Tsunami Information Center said a threat of a tsunami wave had largely passed. Minor sea level fluctuations up to 1 foot (30 cm) were still possible, it said.
The quake was also felt in several provinces across Cuba, the government said. However, it was not strongly felt in the capital of Havana, according to a Reuters witness.
Don Blakeman, a geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information Center, said the impact of quakes was hard to predict but that it happening at sea appeared to have helped.
“The good news is really that it waved out into the ocean,” Blakeman said by telephone. “It would have been a much different story if it had been right in Kingston.”
Reporting by Dave Graham, Stefanie Eschenbacher and Lizbeth Diaz in Mexico City, Kate Chappell in Kingston, Zachary Fagenson in Miami, Rich McKay in Atlanta; Additional reporting by Sandra Maler in Washington, Marc Frank in Havana and Sarah Marsh in Port-au-Prince; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Rosalba O’Brien
Video courtesy WSVN / 7News[/vc_message]
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