Photo: USGS
A 4.2-magnitude earthquake was reported in the California on Thursday (January 8), according to the United States Geological Survey.
The earthquake was recorded at 12:00 a.m. local time and centered at 12 kilometers (about 7.5 miles) east-northeast of Cloverdale at a depth of 2.3 kilometers (about 1.4 miles). The USGS said it received 183 reports of people having felt the earthquake at the time of publication on Thursday.
There is currently no tsunami threat in effect, according to the National Weather Service U.S. Tsunami Warning System. The 4.2-magnitude earthquake was the largest recorded in Cloverdale in the last month and was the ninth within the past 24 hours; the 32nd in the past seven days; the 146th in the past 30 days; and the 1,371st in the past 365 days, according to EarthquakeTrack.com.
California is reported to have had 30 earthquakes measuring 1.5-magnitude or greater in the past 24 hours; 125 in the past seven days; 723 in the last 30 days; and 7,577 in past 365 days, according to EarthquakeTrack.com. Earthquakes measured between 2.5 and 5.4 magnitude can be felt by a large population, however, rarely results in much damage, according to Michigan Tech via the Sacramento Bee.
An estimated 500,000 detectable earthquakes are reported worldwide annually, however, around 100,000 are felt and only 100 typically result in serious damage. Officials strongly advise that anyone caught in an earthquake should drop, cover and hold on, according to the Sacramento Bee.