Earthquake centered in northern Oklahoma rattles state
An quake measuring magnitude 4.4 rumbled Monday afternoon along the Kansas-Oklahoma state line, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The quake happened around 3:19 p.m. People reported feeling the quake in several states, including Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas.
A preliminary measure 4.0 natural disaster struck at 2:41 a.m. 2 miles northeast of Fremont. She said many mentioned things falling off the shelves in their homes.
Weak-to-light shaking was felt by approximately six million residents from as far south as Watsonville, California, through downtown San Francisco and into areas as far north as Vallejo and Fairfield, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Fremont Police Department tweeted this morning: ‘We felt it. Lots of calls coming in from nervous and scared residents, but no reports of damage at this time.’.
No immediate reports of injury or damage were reported from the three earthquakes.
The strongest Oklahoma natural disaster on record is a 5.6 quake centered in Prague in November 2011.