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2006 Greece earthquake


FieldValue
title2006 Greece earthquake
imageMitata 2006 earthquake damage 082013.jpg
captionThe main church of Mitata, Kythira, after the earthquake
map2{{Location mapGreecerelief=1
lat36.26
long23.46
markBullseye1.png
marksize40
positiontop
width250
floatright
timestamp2006-01-08 11:34:54
isc-event8012175
anss-urlusp000e7u3
local-date
local-time13:34:53
magnitude6.7
depth55.0 km
location
typeOblique-slip
countries affectedGreece
intensity
casualties3 injured

|isc-event = 8012175 |anss-url = usp000e7u3 |local-date = |local-time = 13:34:53

The 2006 Greece earthquake – also known as the Kythira earthquake – occurred on January 8 at 13:34:53 local time and was felt throughout the entire eastern Mediterranean basin. The earthquake an magnitude 6.7 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VII (Very strong). Its epicentre was located just off the island of Kythira about 200 km south of Athens.

One person was injured and a number of buildings and roads in Kythira were heavily damaged as a result. Several older houses on the island completely collapsed while the central square of the village of Mitata partially fell into the valley as a result of a subsequent landslide. Few buildings were damaged on the mainland closest to the epicentre (Cape Malea). On the island of Crete, two people were slightly injured in their attempt to abandon their homes. Damage to 146 buildings was recorded in western Crete, including the old town hall of Chania, the third Venetian arsenal, nine schools and many of the houses in the old Venetian town center.

Nevertheless, despite the magnitude and the duration of the tremor (buildings in Athens swayed for almost 40 seconds) no other significant injury or damage was reported in the country's strongest earthquake in decades. This was mainly because the quake had a focal depth of approximately 55 km. The tremor was felt as far away as in Bari on the Adriatic Sea, Naples and much of southern Italy, Malta, Cairo and even along the Lebanese, Syrian and Israeli shorelines. No tsunami was associated with this event.

References

Sources

References

  1. (December 1, 2008). "EXPO-CAT Earthquake Catalog". United States Geological Survey.
  2. ISC. (19 January 2015). "ISC-GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1900–2009)". [[International Seismological Centre]].
  3. (September 4, 2009). "PAGER-CAT Earthquake Catalog". United States Geological Survey.
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