Newport-Mesa feels 4.9 shaker
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Marisa O’Neil
Newport-Mesa got a sharp jolt and some shaking Thursday afternoon
from a 4.9-magnitude earthquake with an epicenter near Yucaipa.
There were no reports of injuries or damage in the area, which was
already on edge following a brief tsunami warning prompted by an
offshore quake Tuesday night. Thursday’s 4.9 temblor was recorded at
1:54 p.m. about three miles northeast of Yucaipa and was downgraded
from a preliminary magnitude of 5.3, according to the U.S. Geological
Survey.
Though it was focused about 75 miles away, many in Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa felt it.
“I was in Newport Beach in one of the boat yards,” Fountain Valley
resident John Halloran said. “I was actually climbing a metal pipe
scaffold to get something when it hit. I’m glad I didn’t fall down. I
didn’t know it was an earthquake and was looking around to see who
was pushing me and no one was there.”
Firefighters in Newport Beach took trucks out of their stations as
a precaution, but did not receive any quake-related calls for
service, Fire Department spokeswoman Jennifer Schulz said.
“It was a jolt then some shaking,” Schultz said from her
second-floor office. “It was over pretty quickly.”
Newport Beach police received an increased number of calls from
residents asking what had happened, but there were no reports of
damage, Sgt. Bill Hartford said. Costa Mesa did not have any damage
reports either, Sgt. Marty Carver said.
Four schools in Newport Mesa -- Wilson, Victoria, Newport and
Killybrooke elementary schools -- reported that they evacuated
students following the earthquake.
“I was in the middle of doing a read-aloud and we were heavily
engrossed in the story, and suddenly we started feeling the
movements,” sixth-grade Andersen Elementary School teacher Shannon
Hahne said. “I looked up at the students and we all stared at each
other. Somebody said, ‘Are we having an earthquake?’ I said, ‘Yes,’
and then we all crawled under our desks.”
An employee at Target on Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa said he
felt the shaking, but nothing fell off store shelves.
The quake was preceded by a 2.0 shaker at 1:43 p.m., based two
miles north of Newport Beach, according to the U.S. Geological
Survey.
The Yucaipa temblor was on a thrust fault near, but not on, the
San Andreas Fault, seismologist Lucy Jones of the U.S. Geological
Survey in Pasadena told reporters in a televised news conference.
It was followed by a number of smaller aftershocks, the largest of
which had a magnitude of 3.5, she said.
The latest quake follows a period of increased seismological
activity.
A 5.2 earthquake shook Anza in Riverside County on Sunday. Then a
7.2 quake hit off the Northern California coast Tuesday night,
briefly prompting a tsunami warning for coastal areas.
Jones told reporters that geologists will investigate if the Anza
and Yucaipa quakes are related.
-- City editor Carol Chambers, staff writer Michael Miller and
Daily Pilot intern Desdemona Bandini contributed to this story.
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