(CNN) -- It met the definition of a major one, but the magnitude-7.2 earthquake that struck Friday in southern Mexico's Guerrero state didn't land the kind of punch that it might have.
"There was no way not to
feel it," Gustavo Lozano told CNN about the temblor, which struck at
9:27 a.m. (10:27 a.m. ET) and was centered 22 miles (36 kilometers)
north-northwest of Tecpan. He was with his family at their home in Barra
de Potosi, a fishing village nearly a three-hour drive northwest of
Tecpan, when the earthquake hit. "It was extremely strong."
Afraid of a possible
tsunami, and unaware that no advisory had been issued for one, he and
his family drove to a shelter at the Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo International
Airport, where dozens of other people also were gathering.
En route, they noticed a
few walls from older buildings had collapsed, but nothing worse. Once
there, they concluded they needn't have bothered taking shelter. "It
seems like the worst has already happened," he said.
The earthquake's timing
and location could have proved devastating -- it occurred on the Pacific
coast between major resort towns of Acapulco and Zihuatanejo during
Holy Week, when Mexicans traditionally flock to the beaches, and resorts
typically run at full capacity.
Its impact was also felt
in Mexico City, 170 miles (273 kilometers) northeast of the epicenter.
"I was working in my radio news program ... and we were talking about
(author) Gabriel GarcĂa Marquez's death, when I started to feel how the ground was shaking and the lamps were moving," journalist Sol Rivera said via e-mail.
She urged her listeners to remain calm and to move to a safe space.
Reporters soon called to inform her that everything was OK.
At least one building in
the capital was damaged, but there were no reports of major damage,
Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera told CNN affiliate FOROtv.
The city's secretary of
civil protection, Fausto Lugo, said electricity failed in some areas and
that some people reported being trapped inside elevators, but that
there were no reports of injuries.
Tecpan is 54 miles (87
kilometers) northwest of Acapulco, where the city's civil protection
office said via Twitter that basic services were operating without
reports of damage.
Seated on top of three
tectonic plates, Mexico is in one of the most seismically active parts
of the world. On September 19, 1985, a magnitude-8.1 earthquake killed
an estimated 9,500 people in Mexico City.
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