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"I heard the roar": Strong earthquake rocks central Idaho

Boise, Idaho — A powerful earthquake struck north of Boise Tuesday evening, with people across a large area reporting that they felt shaking.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the magnitude 6.5 temblor hit just before 6 p.m. It was centered 73 miles northeast of Meridian, near the rural mountain town of Stanley. There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.

More than 2 million people live in the region who could have felt the Idaho quake, according to the USGS, with reports of shaking coming in from as far away as Helena, Montana and Salt Lake City, Utah.

CBS Boise affiliate KBOI-TV says reports flooded its newsroom and popped up on social media from all over the Northwest and even Canada. Viewers said it lasted between 20-30 seconds.

Marcus Smith, an emergency room health unit coordinator at St. Luke's Wood River Medical Center, said the hospital shook but the quake didn't interfere with the treatment of any patients. The hospital in Blaine County, about 65 miles south of the epicenter, is on the front line of Idaho's coronavirus outbreak, in a region with the nation's highest per-capita rates of known COVID-19 cases outside of New York City and its surrounding counties.

"It felt like a wave going through the ground, so I knew right away what it was. It just felt like waves going through the ground," he said.

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Items tossed from shelves are seen after magnitude 6.5 earthquake hit central Idaho on evening of Marhc 31, 2020. KBOI-TV

The earthquake added stress during an already tense time for the region, but Smith said everything seemed fine, for now. "Until the next one, I guess," Smith said. "I mean, that's what we do. We're all good."

Brett Woolley, the owner of Bridge Street Grill in Stanley, said he heard the earthquake coming before he felt it.

"I heard the roar, and at first it sounded like the wind but then the roar was tremendous," Woolley said about 10 minutes after the earthquake. "The whole house was rattling, and I started to panic. I'm sitting here perfectly still and the water next to me is still vibrating."

Greg Hogan, owner of Redwood Cabins in Stanley, told KBOI the quake took him and his 12-year-old son by surprise.

"It was like a heard of rhinos, rhinoceros were running through the house," Hogan said. "My boy's looking at me with his eyes wide open and I just picked him up, grabbed him, and went outside until it settled down. It was a rattler."

" … It was definitely jolting," he said.

Dr. Lucy Jones, a seismologist at Caltech and the founder of the Dr. Lucy Jones Center for Science and Seismology, said the Idaho region has an earthquake of about this strength every 30 or 40 years. The most recent one, a magnitude 7.0 earthquake near Borah Peak in 1983, killed two children in Challis and caused an estimated $12.5 million in property damage across Challis and Mackay.

That quake was along what scientists call a "normal fault" and caused vertical movement, she said. Tuesday's quake appeared to be on an unmapped "strike-slip fault," causing mostly horizontal movement along the fault line.

"This is one that wasn't obvious enough to be mapped before now," Jones said.

Unmapped faults of this size are rarer in highly populated areas like California, she said, but in sparsely populated and remote regions like central Idaho they're less likely to cause damage and less likely to be a focus of geologists and seismologists.

Residents in the region will likely continue to feel aftershocks, she said. The area had already recorded five aftershocks within the first hours after the 6.5 earthquake.

"An aftershock is just an earthquake, but it happens at a time that doesn't surprise us," she said. "They do every bit as much damage."

People in an earthquake should drop to the floor and cover their heads with their arms, she said.

"Get to the floor before the earthquake throws you there, and if you have a table nearby, get under it and hold onto it," Jones said. "Running in an earthquake is incredibly dangerous - people die from running in an earthquake. Just get down and try to cover.

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