Did you feel an earthquake around 5:30 p.m. on Sunday afternoon?
Probably not.
Related Articles
Great California Shakeout: Earthquake drill comes on Loma Prieta quake’s 35th anniversary
Quake mystery: 2024 brings most seismic activity to Southern California in decades. Why now?
3 Bay Area counties are among the most at risk in U.S. for natural disasters. One is trying to improve its preparedness.
Elias: Ricardo Lara, Gavin Newsom caving in to California’s insurers they regulate
4.2 earthquake Sunday was largest in two years in Bay Area region
The 3.6-magnitude quake may have shaken things up out in the Pacific Ocean, off the south Orange County Coast. But on land? Not so much.
The temblor was 32 miles south-southwest of Dana Point, 32.5 miles from San Clemente, and 34.9 miles from Laguna Beach, according to a preliminary report from the U.S. Geological Survey.
A USGS map shows that weak shaking occurred in some spots along the O.C. coastline, as well as in Long Beach.
The earthquake was preceded by two smaller ones.
Around 4:11 p.m., a 3.1-magnitude quake hit in the same general area, followed by another that registered at a 2.5 magnitude, the USGS site shows.