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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

3.0-magnitude earthquake in Gyeonggi-do Tuesday at 6:08 pm.

Around 6:15 on a bus heading out of Seoul today, a display flashed across the bottom of the TV screen saying that a 3.0 magnitude earthquake was detected north of Seoul today at 6:08 pm. KBS Global has the only coverage thus far in English:
A three-point-zero magnitude earthquake jolted parts of Gyeonggi Province on Tuesday evening.

The Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) said the quake occurred at 6:08 p.m. with the epicenter eight kilometers north of Siheung.

It's not uncommon for South Korea to experience small earthquakes, and browsing the Earthquake Information page from the KMA---from whence the map below comes---you can get maps for others over the past few years.

5 comments:

  1. Earthquakes of this size should make people grateful. When tectonic plates shift, they build up pressure over time. Releasing that pressure is a good thing. Having a 3.0 earthquake now means that there won't be a 4.0 earthquake a couple years from now.

    They only ever get more powerful as time goes on.

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  2. I was sitting in a chair at my house last night and felt it. I felt it enough to immediately jump up and head towards my wife and son who were in the kitchen. I asked my wife if she felt it but she didn't, I played it off as maybe a large construction vehicle going by or something. I live in Iteawon and felt it pretty good, I hate to feel a 7 or 8 magnitude quake.

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  3. We Californians eat 3.0 earthquakes for breakfast!

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  4. I actually saw that when I was on the plane back from Indonesia... The news was subtitled in English, but didn't give much in the way of information.

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