Well I was sitting in class today and I felt some shaking, earthquake!! I got my ass up out of my seat and started packing my sh1t, meanwhile everyone else is sitting down looking around as if they dont know what just happened. My legs were shaking, my heart was pounding and I was about to book it out of the room but for the sake of looking like a jackass, I didnt. The alarms went off and the school was evacuated onto the baseball field where we were caged like animals!
There were 27 aftershocks, but I felt none. Luckily I was many miles away from the epicenter
A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.4 shook large parts of Southern California, shaking a wide swath from Ventura County to San Diego.
The quake shook downtown L.A. buildings and was felt as far east as Palm Springs.
Kate Hutton, a staff seismologist at Caltech, said 11 aftershocks were recorded at various places, with 3.8 being the largest and the only one felt.
"It was somewhat similar to the [1987] Whittier Narrows [quake]. Most everyone in the L.A. Basin felt it. Things will have fallen off shelves. I'd be surprised to see some structural damage. There could be some cases of cracked plaster and maybe broken windows, but not structural damage, which is when a building is compromised."
She said today's quake was significantly smaller than the Whittier Narrows quake. That one was on a blind thrust fault, hidden under sediment. Hutton said she did not know if today's quake was on the same type of fault.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has activated the Office of Emergency Services, and officials urged people throughout Southern California to cut back telephone use because the system was being "maxed out."
Raja Mitwasi, chief deputy director of the California Department of Transportation office in Los Angeles, said that traffic on the county's highway system was not disrupted by the earthquake. He said Caltrans has been monitoring traffic flows from its traffic management center.
The agency also is inspecting highway bridges and pavement.
"So far, there is nothing visible. We don't even see minor damage," Mitwasi said. "Traffic appears to be moving normally. We don't see any delay."
The biggest initial concern was in San Bernardino County, which is particularly susceptible to damage because of its high water table.
But there were no reports of injury to people or of structural damage, said Jodi Miller, a spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. Phones in the Chino Hills Sheriff's Station have been working intermittently, but the dispatch center has had no disruptions, she added.
Sheriff's officials are responding to multiple calls from people concerned because their house alarms have been activated. They also have heard many reports of books and groceries flying off the shelves at supermarkets and at a local Barnes & Noble bookstore.
Miller said the department is also getting inundated with calls from people who were frightened by the shaking.
TV helicopter footage of the Chino Hills area showed people being evacuated from schools and some buildings, but no major damage.
The L.A. County Sheriff's Department said it has no immediate reports of injuries.
The Stanley Mosk Courthouse on Grand Avenue has been evacuated as a precautionary measure. Security officials said they expect the building to reopen after one hour.
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors was in closed session at the time of the earthquake and did not suspend its meeting.
The quake interrupted a meeting of the Los Angeles City Council, causing the 27-story City Hall to sway just as Councilman Dennis Zine was criticizing a plan to increase trash fees.
"Earthquake! Earthquake! We've got an earthquake," said Zine, as members of the audience began to cry out. "It's still happening."
Phoenix native Nathan Blaylock was lying in bed watching television this morning in his penthouse apartment in downtown Los Angeles when he felt his first earthquake.
"It felt like someone hit the side of the building. It was rocking," said Blaylock, a medical equipment salesman who said he has lived in Los Angeles for about seven months. "It scared me a little bit, then I realized what it was."
Elevators at the Pegasus Apartments, Blaylock's building, shut down as a result of the earthquake. It was not immediately clear whether anyone was trapped in the elevators when they stopped working.
Orange County also felt shaking, and officials were checking reports of possible minor runway damage at John Wayne Airport.
"It's the first time in my life I actually got under my desk," said Anaheim Police Sgt. Ken Seymour, who has lived in Southern California his whole life.
It's too early to tell if there's any major damage but all units are checking overpasses, bridges and tall buildings, he said.
On the UC Irvine campus, a community college student attending a special summer program began to cry as her English classroom pitched and rolled for about 30 seconds. She was comforted by a counselor and soon was smiling and chatting again. The class in English critical thinking and literature is part of a program for Santa Ana College students to help them transfer to a four-year university.
The quake was felt forcefully in Long Beach, where a series of sharp and loud jolts hit.
Dozens of office workers evacuated high-rise buildings in downtown Long Beach, but there were no immediate reports of physical damage.
In Alhambra, an apartment building rolled and the foundations shook, but not enough to shake books off shelves.
Three people were killed and roughly 10,600 homes and businesses were damaged in the magnitude 6.1 Whittier Narrows earthquake in 1987 and a 5.5 aftershock, and thousands of people were displaced. Many more, their nerves rattled, slept outside on sidewalks or in parks for days after the earthquake, prompting the Red Cross to erect circus tents for people to sleep in. The quakes caused more than $125 million in damage.
The initial, stronger quake hit before dawn on Oct. 1, and the strong aftershock hit early in the morning on Oct. 4.
The governor issued the following statement: "I have spoken with Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, acting Mayor Wendy Greuel, Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca, and Chino Hills City Manager Doug La Belle to check on the status of their communities and to offer them whatever assistance they need from the state. Our state Office of Emergency Services has reached out to local governments in the affected area to ensure that levees, bridges and other critical infrastructure are inspected and declared safe. We are activating our regional and state emergency operations centers and will continue monitoring the situation closely."
