SAN DIEGO, California -
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Dozens of small to moderate
earthquakes struck the southeastern corner of California on Sunday,
causing minor damages to structures and rattling nerves in a small
farming town east of San Diego.
The largest quake
registered at a magnitude 5.5 and was centered about three miles
northwest of the town of Brawley, said Robert Graves, a geophysicist
with the U.S. Geological Survey. Another quake Sunday registered at
magnitude 5.3.
More than 30 additional
earthquakes with magnitudes of at least 3.5 jiggled the same area near
the southern end of the Salton Sea, Graves said.
"The type of activity that we're seeing could possibly continue for several hours or even days," Graves said.
At the El Sol Market in Brawley, food packages fell from the shelves, littering aisle ways.
Several glasses and a
bottle of wine crashed to the floor and shattered at Assaggio, an
Italian restaurant in Brawley, said owner Jerry Ma. The shaking was
short-lived but intense, he said.
"It felt like there was
quake every 15 minutes. One after another. My kids are small and they're
scared and don't want to come back inside," said Mike Patel, who
manages Townhouse Inn & Suites in Brawley.
A TV came crashing down and a few light fixtures broke inside the motel, Patel said.
A Brawley Police Department dispatcher said several downtown buildings sustained minor damage. No injuries were reported.
The first quake, with a
magnitude of 3.9, occurred at 10:02 a.m. The USGS said more than 100
aftershocks struck the same approximate epicenter, about 16 miles north
of El Centro.
Some shaking was felt along
the San Diego County coast in Del Mar, some 120 miles from the
epicenter, as well as in the Coachella Valley, southern Orange County
and parts of northern Mexico.
USGS seismologist Lucy Jones said earthquake swarms are characteristic of the region, known as the Brawley Seismic Zone.
"The area sees lots of
events at once, with many close to the largest magnitude, rather than
one main shock with several much smaller aftershocks," Jones said.
The last major swarm was in 2005, following a magnitude-5.1 quake, she said.
Sunday's quake cluster
occurred in what scientists call a transition zone between the Imperial
and San Andreas faults, so they weren't assigning the earthquakes to
either fault, Graves said.