Magnitude 5.1 earthquake strikes near the Greek capital of Athens

Magnitude 5.1 earthquake strikes near the Greek capital of Athens sending people running into the streets

  • Earthquake struck near the town of Magoúla, 14 miles north of the Greek capital 
  • Tremor hit at 2.13pm local time and has caused power outages in Athens 
  • People went running into the streets to avoid being crushed by falling buildings 

A strong earthquake shook the Greek capital of Athens on Wednesday afternoon.

The quake hit at 2.13pm local time near the town of Magoúla, 14 miles north of Athens with a magnitude of 5.1, according to the Euro-Mediterranean Institute. 

Those caught up in the quake described it as powerful and prolonged, with some running out into the streets in order to avoid buildings collapsing on them. 

An earthquake of at least magnitude 5.1 struck near Magoúla, 14 miles north of Greek capital Athens at 2.13pm local time on Friday

Telecommunication networks were knocked out by the tremor, while power was also cut to some parts of the Greek capital, the BBC reported.

Others likened it to the 1999 earthquake which struck Athens and measured 6 on the Richter scale.

In total, 143 people died in that earthquake – most of whom were crushed by buildings which collapsed.

Another 1,600 had to be treated for injuries while the cost of the damage was estimated at more than $4billion. 

July this year has already seen 17 notable earthquakes and June a further 22 events. Last year this same two month span saw only 23 large tremors around the world. 

The current dramatic increase in events is notable but not ‘statistically significant’ experts claim, and they state it is purely down to random chance.  

2019 has been a particularly volatile year for earthquake activity, promoting warnings that a large quake could be coming soon

2019 has been a particularly volatile year for earthquake activity, promoting warnings that a large quake could be coming soon

Earthquakes are triggered by a variety of issues arising from the movement of the planet’s tectonic plates, when they jerk and slide past each other.

There is no single reason behind the uptick in deadly quakes as it is due to the natural movement and processes of the Earth’s mantle, a throbbing magma-fuelled beast immune from seasonal variation. 

In 2011 there were mounting concerns over an increasing number of magnitude .0+ earthquakes.

These devastating events only occur around once a year but became more frequent in the mid 00s.

Two in 2004, two in 2006 and an unprecedented four in 2007 caused concern for those living on fault lines.

These episodes included the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake (magnitude 9.2), whose resultant tsunami killed just under 228,000 people, the 2006 Kuril Islands quake (magnitude 8.3) and the 2007 Peru earthquake (magnitude 8.0), which killed 519 people, injured 1,366 and completely destroyed around 58,580 homes. 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk