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At least 42 people are confirmed dead after an earthquake rocked Mexico City Tuesday, just 12 days after the country suffered its strongest earthquake in a century.
Tuesday’s earthquake registered as a magnitude 7.1 and struck about 70 miles southeast of Mexico’s capital, according to an independent earthquake monitoring organization.
M7.1 #earthquake (#sismo) strikes 115 km SE of Mexico City (#Mexico) 23 min ago. Updated map of its effects: pic.twitter.com/kihz8ZvHWJ
— EMSC (@LastQuake) September 19, 2017
Mexico City’s infrastructure and occupants were violently rocked when the earthquake hit. Residents poured into the city’s streets as building’s rocked throughout the city, some even falling completely and trapping people beneath the debris, according to Reuters.
Live footage captured at the scene depicts examples of the earthquake’s serious destruction.
#TenemosSismo #19DeSeptiembre
No fue #simulacro, fue real.Edificios colapsando. #sismo pic.twitter.com/NY9icikr0r
— Andi Palma (@andipalma) September 19, 2017
Buildings also rattle in this video shot from a street.
Momento captado durante el fuerte terremoto en la #CDMX #AlertaSismica pic.twitter.com/NqLf9U2Axm
— Alerta Chiapas ⚡ (@AlertaChiapas) September 19, 2017
Theoretical physicist Michio Kaku said on CBS News that Tuesday’s earthquake should serve as a “wake up call” to California, since the state is not prepared to handle a major earthquake. Devastation scenes from Mexico played in the background as Kaku spoke.
"I think we have to see this as a wake-up call," @michiokaku says of Mexico quake, noting California's risk of being jolted by a tremor. pic.twitter.com/2f4vdK5b9b
— CBS News (@CBSNews) September 19, 2017
The earthquake comes just 12 days after tens of millions of Mexican residents felt the strongest earthquake that has hit the country in a century. A 8.1 magnitude earthquake hit southern Mexico Sept. 7, killing at least 100 people, The Wall Street Journal reports.
“This time it was so much closer, in Puebla, so it felt a lot stronger,” a Mexico City resident told The WSJ. “It makes a big difference, how close it is.”
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