5.2-Magnitude Offshore Earthquake Rattles Greece

Athens: Authorities said that an earthquake of 5.2 magnitude came out of Euboea Island early on Tuesday and felt strongly in Athens.
The Earthquake Local Clock (2130 GMT) is open at the open sea (2130 GMT) in the northeast of the Greek capital of the Greek capital of the Geodinamic Institute of Athens National Observatory.
The Institute said that the central base is four kilometers from the coastal town of Nea Styra in southwest of Euboea.
There was no instant loss or damage report.
Stergios Tsirkas, the Mayor of the nearby Marathon City, described the earthquake as “very busy” in comments about Ert Television.
In May, a strong earthquake of 6.1 came out of Crete Island and felt in the Greek capital until Egypt.
In January and February, the island of Santorini in the Aegean Sea, a large Greek tourism center, experienced extraordinary seismic activity.
There, thousands of tremors caused thousands of inhabitants to escape, but they’ve returned home since then.
Greece, which is located in various mistakes in the Southeast Mediterranean, is regularly hit by earthquakes.
The last fatal earthquake was hit in October 2020 on the island of Samos in the Aegean Sea.
He killed two people in Samos with seven sizes and more than 100 people in the port city of Türkiye in Izmir.

