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7.0 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes In Aegean Sea, 4 Dead In Turkey - NPR

Rescuers search for survivors in a collapsed building in Izmir, Turkey, after a powerful earthquake struck Turkey's western coast and parts of Greece Friday. Mert Cakir/AFP via Getty Images

Mert Cakir/AFP via Getty Images

Updated at 1:15 p.m. ET

At least 16 people died in Turkey and Greece Friday, after a powerful earthquake struck off the shore of a Greek island in the eastern Aegean Sea. Emergency crews are working to find victims and survivors of the earthquake, which registered a magnitude of 7.0, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. More than 100 aftershocks have been felt, Turkish officials say.

The earthquake's worst effects are being reported in western Turkey, where officials say 12 people are dead and more than 400 are injured. At least 17 buildings were destroyed or damaged in Izmir — one of Turkey's largest cities, which was known in antiquity as Smyrna.

One person died by drowning, according to Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management Authority. The agency says search and rescue crews are still trying to reach anyone who might be trapped or injured.

The strong quake struck north of Néon Karlovásion, a small town on the Greek island of Samos. At least eight people were injured there, according to Greek state-run broadcaster ERT. But it also reports that two high school students, a boy and a girl, died in the city of Samos after a wall lining a narrow street collapsed on them.

The earthquake crumbled old buildings on the island; it also triggered a wall of seawater that flooded stores and swept cars away, ERT reports.

A strong earthquake shook parts of Turkey and Greece on Friday, after striking north of the Greek island of Samos. USGS / Screenshot by NPR

USGS / Screenshot by NPR

The quake shook a broad section of western Turkey – particularly Izmir, where hundreds of thousands of people live some 40 miles from the quake's epicenter. Turkey says its military is rushing relief supplies and personnel to the area.

Friday's earthquake is an "intraplate event," the USGS says, resulting from the Africa plate grinding along the Eurasia tectonic plate. The earthquake, which hit roughly 155 miles north of the main boundary between those plates, is largely consistent with earlier temblors in the region, the agency said.

"While commonly plotted as points on maps, earthquakes of this size are more appropriately described as slip over a larger fault area," the USGS says. It adds that a 7.0 magnitude quake would normally have a fault area of 50 x 20 km — about 31 x 12 miles.

Each year, the Africa plate moves northward around 10 mm (around .40 inches), the agency says.

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