Monday, July 29, 2024

Texas County Rocked By More Than 60 Quakes With Up To 5.1 Magnitude In A Week


US state is rocked by more than SIXTY earthquakes with up to 5.1 magnitude in a week



A single county has reported more than 60 earthquakes in the last week, sparking a State of Emergency to be declared.

Scurry County in West Texas was hit by a 5.1-magnitude quake on Friday, which was felt as far north as Oklahoma, followed by a 4.5-magnitude the next day.

The epicenter in Hermleigh has now experienced 62 seismic events since last Monday (July 23). 

County Judge Dan hicks declared a disaster in the county Friday to get assistance from the state and is asking anyone with damage or losses to fill out a survey that will help them identify the scope of damage in the area.

The seismic events began on Monday, July 23 when reports flooded out of Texas after a 4.9-magnitude shook Hermleigh residents awake at 10:38pm CST, which was also felt in Oklahoma and New Mexico.

A 4.4-magnitude aftershock occurred less than 10 minutes after the initial earthquake and residents experienced a 3.1-magnitude in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Hermleigh experienced another 4.0-magnitude earthquake shortly before 11pm CST on Thursday and about an hour later experience a 2.5-magnitude aftershock. 

Many other quakes were reported throughout the week but registered under a 3-magnitude.

At least six seismic events were reported on Friday, with the 5.1-magnitude being marked as the fifth largest ever to hit the state.

No damages or injuries have been reported. 

The largest quake was felt about 80 miles away in Lubbock and across parts of the South Plains.

West Texas is not located on a major fault line, but features 250 minor ones that extents outward 1,800 miles from the Dallas-Fort Worth area. 

'You know, we've had [quakes] as long as I think time's been recorded here, as long as we've had people here,' Hicks told Abilene Reporter News.

'But we don't know of any that were this intense.' 

The recent uptick in seismic events has led to the Railroad Commission (RRC) of Texas opening an investigation to see if they were caused by injection of fluids into the ground for the extraction of petroleum products.


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