Iceland shaken by magnitude 6.1 earthquake

                      A crack is seen on Highway 1 after an earthquake in Selfoss, ...
                      Reuters
                      Thu May 29, 7:59 PM ET
                       2 of 8

A crack is seen on Highway 1 after an earthquake in Selfoss, 50 km (31 miles) southeast of the capital Reykjavik, May 29, 2008. A strong earthquake rocked Iceland on Thursday, damaging roads and buildings in one town and sending frightened residents running into the streets. REUTERS/Morgunbladid (ICELAND).



Iceland shaken by magnitude 6.1 earthquake

By GUDJON HELGASON, Associated Press Writer
Thu May 29, 4:22 PM ET

A strong earthquake shook southern Iceland on Thursday, causing more than a dozen injuries as it rocked buildings in the capital, touched off landslides and forced evacuations in outlying towns, officials and local media said.

Government officials reported that 15 to 20 people from Selfoss, 30 miles southeast of the capital of Reykjavik, were injured in the quake, none of them seriously. They were taken to a local health center for treatment.

The U.S. Geological Survey said Selfoss was near the epicenter of the magnitude 6.1 quake, which hit at 3:46 p.m.

Sharp aftershocks were feared over the next few hours in the southwest of the country, and police traveled around the nearby town of Hveragerdi, 28 miles east of Reykjavik, with a bullhorn, advising residents to stay outdoors.

An Associated Press Television News cameraman in Hveragerdi reported at least two aftershocks, and said residents were beginning to pitch tents outside because they were not allowed to return home.

Amateur video footage aired on the national broadcaster RUV television showed rocks tumbling down the sides of jagged peaks in Vestmannaeyjum, a small archipelago off the south coast of Iceland. Residents in the capital felt buildings shake. The road between Reykjavik and Selfoss was closed by quake damage, RUV said.

Iceland, population 300,000, is a geologically unstable volcanic island in the north Atlantic.

The country's last major earthquake, in June 2000, measured 6.6. It knocked down a dozen houses but caused no serious injuries.


HERE


                         People are seen at a makeshift tent set up in the wake of an ...
                         AP
                         Thu May 29, 4:00 PM ET
                         3 of 8

People are seen at a makeshift tent set up in the wake of an earthquake in Hveragerdi, Iceland, Thursday, May 29, 2008. A powerful earthquake shook Iceland on Thursday, rocking buildings in the capital, lightly injuring more than a dozen people and forcing residents in outlying towns to evacuate. The U.S. Geological Survey said the 6.1 magnitude quake hit at 3:46 p.m. (1546 GMT), with its epicenter near the town of Selfoss, 30 miles (50 kilometers) east, southeast of the capital, Reykjavik.

(AP Photo/Morgunbladid)



                            Healthworkers care for patients outside a hospital after an ...
                           Reuters
                          Thu May 29, 8:01 PM ET

                           1 of 8   

Healthworkers care for patients outside a hospital after an earthquake in Selfoss, 50 km (31 miles) southeast of the capital Reykjavik, May 29, 2008. A strong quake rocked Iceland on Thursday, damaging roads and buildings in one town and sending frightened residents running into the streets. REUTERS/Morgunbladid (ICELAND).


                           A strong earthquake hit Iceland on Thursday, May 29, 2008. (Graphics/Reuters) ...
                           Reuters
                           Thu May 29, 3:51 PM ET
                           4 of 8

A strong earthquake hit Iceland on Thursday, May 29, 2008.

(Graphics/Reuters)
 

 

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