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A strong earthquake about 50 kilometers south of Zagreb has shaken Croatia. It gives serious damage, a child died, several people were injured and buried. The earthquake was also strongly felt in Austria.
4:16 pm, December 29, 2020
For several seconds It shook the earth across much of Austria on Tuesday at 12:19 p.m.. The trembling of Strength 6.4 on the Richter scale It is Tuesday has been recorded in Croatia just under 50 kilometers south of Zagreb. The center of the earthquake was ten kilometers deep. The Central Institute of Meteorology and Geodynamics (ZAMG) recorded the 6.4 magnitude earthquake in space Petrinja.
In the city of 25,000 Petrinja, which is about three kilometers from the center of the earthquake and about 50 kilometers south of the capital Zagreb, several houses collapsed. According to media reports, there should be people buried in it. A child died as a result of the earthquake.
Regional broadcaster N1 reported that screams could be heard through the rubble. According to Darinko Dumbović (Mayor of Petrinja), two kindergartens were destroyed by the earthquake. The prime minister and the president have arrived in Petrinja. Police have asked residents to leave the building. All available emergency services were mobilized for Petrinja. An HRT reporter appeals: “Zagreb and Sisak urgently need help!” Volunteers are needed right away who can help with the cleanup job.
Notable in Austria
The earthquake was too much clearly noticeable outside Croatian borders. In Carinthia and Styria the earthquake was felt. In Graz, for example, the tall buildings not only wobbled for about two minutes, but the undulating movements could also be felt in huge old single-story buildings. Christmas decorations and sliding glass doors wobbled, windows and furniture creaked. The earthquake was much more notable than the one in the spring near Zagreb. Also, the tremors lasted longer. Even in Vienna there were reports that the walls were shaking.
Dramatic scenes in Croatia
In the city of 50,000 Helmet Wounded and seriously injured were admitted to the hospital every minute. A baby in the incubator was transported to Zagreb because the hospital was full. All Covid patients are also taken to Zagreb, even by military helicopter.
Sisak’s Sanja Ivanisevic on the dramatic minutes © Antenna
The center of the earthquake was about 45 kilometers southwest of Zagreb, near Petrinja. The center of the earthquake on Monday was already there, which had a magnitude of 5.2.
Damage in Zagreb
According to Croatian television (HRT1), the earth shook in Zagreb for 20 seconds. The police are asking everyone to leave their homes immediately. People are standing in front of the theater in Zagreb: “The shock, the fear after the earthquake in March runs deep in everyone.”
The earthquake caused severe traffic chaos in the Croatian capital. There were quite a few traffic jams because people were leaving the city. Public transport was temporarily paralyzed, there were problems in the electrical and telecommunications networks. Croatian government buildings were also damaged and the army is helping with clean-up work.
Krsko nuclear power plant closed as a precaution
According to the state alert center, there are no reports of damage to the Krsko power plant. Slovenia’s nuclear power plant is apparently designed for a power of 8-8.5. Colleague Simon Rothschedl had telephone contact with the operators. As after every earthquake, the power plant was shut down and is in a “safe shutdown”.
“Sure shakes and sways”
Currently several eyewitness reports are coming in. Our colleague Martina Schmerlaib from Lavanttal reports: “We clearly felt that in Wolfsberg. It wasn’t a tug as is often the case, but it spread like waves. The balls on the Christmas tree wobbled. A colleague who lives on the second floor of A residential building, I felt it too. It felt like the house was rocking. ” Andreas Jandl of the Villach editorial team reports that in Annenheim some residents of the settlement approached houses to ask if everyone had felt the earthquake. Jandl himself thought he had circulatory problems because he was dizzy. Users continually speak of swaying Christmas trees, swaying lamps and curtains. There were creaks from windows and doors. Some also remember the year 1976. The Friuli earthquake on Thursday May 6, 1976 shook the Italian region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia for a minute with tremors of up to a magnitude of 6.5.
Klagenfurt video by Hansjörg Szepannek
In 2020, significantly more earthquakes were felt in Austria
That year there were 69 earthquakes significantly more earthquakes in Austria noticeable than normal. Of these, 60 were “domestic” and five were from the neighboring countries of Italy, Slovenia and Switzerland and four from Croatia, which were noted in this country. In general, according to the Tuesday published ZAMG balance 1465 earthquakes in Austria located.
69 notable tremors are significantly more than average. “In the last ten years there have been an average of 57 notable earthquakes per year in Austria. In the last 20 years there have been an average of 48,” explained seismologist Rita Meurers from the Central Institute for Meteorology and Geodynamics. A trend towards more earthquakes cannot be observed. The number varies greatly from year to year. “For example, 2018 and 2019 brought relatively few notable tremors.”
New record
The most notable events of the year were March 22 near Zagreb (Croatia) and the August 8 earthquake near Zams (Tyrol). Thousands of people noticed them, some with vigor. However, only slight damage to the building was reported, such as cracks in the plaster.
The number of all instrumentally recorded earthquakes in Austria reached a new record in 2020 at 1465. “The reason for this is, in addition to the somewhat higher seismic activity this year, the constant expansion and consolidation of the earthquake monitoring network in Austria and increased international cooperation, which means more very weak and imperceptible earthquakes are being recorded, “said ZAMG seismologist Meurers.
As has often been the case in the past, this year the most felt earthquakes were in Tyrol, where 27 occurred, or almost half of all domestic earthquakes. With ten notable tremors, Carinthia ranks second and therefore well above the average for previous years. Seven were noticed in Styria. With just five tremors, Lower Austria is below the average for recent years. There were also five in Vorarlberg. It is followed by Upper Austria with four and Salzburg with two palpable earthquakes.