A magnitude 3.7 earthquake hit Concord Sunday morning, the United States Geological Survey said. The quake hit between Willow Pass and Clayton roads, near 6th Street, around 8:49 a.m. According to the USGS, the earthquake had a depth of nearly 9 miles.
The San Francisco Bay Area was met with another earthquake on Sunday morning, the second quake to affect the area since Friday.
The San Francisco Bay Area was rattled by a minor earthquake Friday morning that struck just off the coast, followed by at least two aftershocks.The 3.6 magnitude quake struck at 7:02 a.m. off the coast of San Francisco,
The Bay Area got a quick shake Sunday morning when an earthquake rattled the region near Concord. According to early measurements by the U.S. Geological Survey, a magnitude 3.9 earthquake centered near Concord hit at approximately 8:49 a.m. There are no reports of damage or injuries.
An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 3.7 shook San Francisco Bay Area residents awake on Friday morning, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The earthquake struck at 7:02 a.m., just 3 miles northwest of the San Francisco Zoo. The shake had a depth of 5.2 miles and no injuries have been reported.
A 3.5-magnitude earthquake near Concord in the East Bay shook the area on Sunday, two days after a quake of similar magnitude struck in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Francisco on Friday, data from the agency shows. Residents across the region reported mild shaking but no immediate damage from either earthquake.
A 3.5 magnitude earthquake struck near Daly City in the San Francisco Bay Area, with no immediate reports of significant damage.
A magnitude 3.7 earthquake was recorded in the Bay Area on Friday morning, according to the United States Geological Survey.
CONCORD, Calif. – The San Francisco Bay Area was met with another earthquake on Sunday morning, the second quake to affect the area since Friday. The earthquake happened at about 8:50 a.m. PT.
If disasters are unavoidable in California, we need to accept that fact and adopt Gov. Pete Wilson’s preventive approach, rather than merely reacting after the fact.
San Francisco is unlikely to experience a catastrophic wildfire like those that broke out in the Los Angeles area earlier this month because of its relative lack of wildland and its cool climate, despite ruinous conflagrations early in the city’s history.
You can play bocce by the San Francisco Ferry Building and at Joe DiMaggio Playground in North Beach. Or head for one of the dozens of Bay Area wineries with their own bocce facilities — Pleasanton’s Rubino Estates, perhaps, or Santa Rosa’s D’Argenzio Winery.