WELLS, Nev. - Windows shattered and building facades and signs fell, but no one was seriously injured when a powerful earthquake shook this rural northeastern town Thursday.
The quake, which had an estimated magnitude of 6.0, according to the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo., struck at 6:16 a.m., and was centered in a sparsely populated area 11 miles southeast of Wells near the Nevada-Utah line.
Donna Anderson of Wells said she was surprised by how abruptly the quake hit.
"It just immediately jumped into rattling the walls," she said from the Wagon Wheel residential motel where she lives with her dog, Sis. She said it seemed like the shaking went on for "five or six hours" but probably lasted only a few minutes.
"I wasn't terribly scared, but it felt like everything was just going to crumble down around us," she said.
The temblor was felt across much of the West, from northern Idaho and Utah to Southern California, and more than a dozen aftershocks were reported, officials said.
"Definitely a lot of people felt this, and if they were sleeping, they were awoken," said USGS geophysicist Carrieann Bedwell.
In Wendover, Utah, on the Nevada border, Tammy Wadsworth was ironing clothes when the quake hit.
"I kept thinking, 'When is it going to quit?' A couple pictures fell off the walls," she said. "One of my grandkids ran outside. They didn't know what else to do. It scared them."
The most serious damage was reported in Wells' largely unoccupied historic district, where an estimated 20 to 25 buildings in the old historical district have been "heavily damaged," Elko County sheriff's Sgt. Kevin McKinney said.
Brick facades tumbled off several buildings, signs fell and windows broke, and some vehicles parked on the street were damaged by falling debris, KELK Radio in Elko reported.
The town of about 1,300 was closed to all but residents, the Nevada Highway Patrol said. Officials posted signs along nearby highways telling motorists to fill up on gasoline elsewhere.
Three injuries were reported, but they were "not very serious: a broken arm, some head lacerations, some difficulty breathing," McKinney said.
State officials said crews were inspecting roads, bridges and dams in the area for structural damage, and that two main water lines in the historic area had ruptured.
Tony Lowry, an assistant professor of geophysics at Utah State University, said the size of the quake and its location are unusual.
"In that part of Nevada, I don't think we've seen any like that in the last 150 years or so," Lowry said. "It's not one of the places we would've looked or expected."
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