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Va. quake rattles Eastern Seaboard

People evacuate buildings on Broadway in New York City after a magnitude 5.9 earthquake strikes states on the east coast of the United States on August 23, 2011. UPI/John Angelillo
1 of 6 | People evacuate buildings on Broadway in New York City after a magnitude 5.9 earthquake strikes states on the east coast of the United States on August 23, 2011. UPI/John Angelillo | License Photo

RICHMOND, Va., Aug. 23 (UPI) -- An earthquake rattled Northern Virginia Tuesday, briefly causing a power shutdown at a nuclear plant and emptying the White House in nearby Washington.

The 5.8-magnitude quake was the strongest in Virginia in more than a century, and shook cities all along the Eastern Seaboard of the United States. U.S. emergency officials said there were no reports of major damage, but cellphone usage was congested and the public was asked to use e-mail instead.

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The White House said President Barack Obama, on vacation in Martha's Vineyard off Massachusetts, held a conference call with Cabinet secretaries and advisers "to discuss the earthquake and the status of critical infrastructure."

"The president was told that there are no initial reports of major infrastructure damage, including at airports and nuclear facilities and that there were currently no requests for assistance," the White House said.

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The central tower of the National Cathedral, the highest elevation in Washington, sustained damage to three of its four spires, The Washington Post reported. Some animals at the National Zoo, evidently sensing the quake before it hit, seemed to call out warnings, the newspaper said.

The National Park Police closed several monuments -- including the Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial and Jefferson Memorial -- for inspection.

The Pentagon, the world's largest office building, was partially evacuated after its foundation was shaken by the earthquake. Employees were permitted to return to work shortly after 2 p.m., the Post reported.

The U.S. Geological Survey, headquartered for the East in nearby Reston, Va., said the epicenter of the quake was 34 miles northwest of Richmond, Va., and 87 miles southwest of Washington.

The quake struck at 1:51 p.m. at a depth of 3.7 miles.

The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported the quake was felt in Washington, New York and North Carolina. The newspaper said buildings swayed, and damage reports had begun to trickle in.

There were no immediate reports of injuries.

The Times-Dispatch said the epicenter was not far from Dominion Virginia Power's North Anna nuclear plant in Louisa County. The quake knocked out power, but the utility said it had manually shut down both nuclear units without incident.

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"We did lose on-site power, but all the diesel generators are up and running," Dominion spokesman Richard Zuercher told the newspaper 30 minutes after the quake. "Everything appears to be operating just fine."

In Washington, the Federal Emergency Management Agency issued a statement saying it was closely monitoring the situation.

"Though there are no early reports of major damage or requests for assistance at this time, preliminary damage assessments are currently taking place in all affected states and we will continue to work closely with their emergency management officials," the statement said.

"Due to overload of cellphone usage, there are reports of cellphone congestion," the statement added. "We request that members of the public use e-mail or text messages if possible to communicate for the next few hours, except in cases of emergency, so that emergency officials can continue to receive and respond to urgent calls."

Though Amtrak train service along the Northeast Corridor north of Baltimore to Boston -- including Acela Express, Northeast Regional, Keystone Service and Springfield Shuttle -- was operating at normal speed, service from Baltimore to Washington and points south was operating at reduced speed as railroad infrastructure was inspected.

Passengers should expect delays through the evening, Amtrak said.

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The streets of downtown Washington were filled with thousands of people as buildings from the Capitol to the White House were evacuated, The New York Times reported.

Pennsylvania Avenue from Capitol Hill to the White House was filled with evacuated workers and tourists, none showing panic, the Times said.

Several buildings in New York City were evacuated, and the tremors were reported on Twitter from Martha's Vineyard, Pittsburgh and Milwaukee.

Four miles from the quake's epicenter, residents of Mineral, Va., reported extensive damage to items inside homes, the Times said. Mineral has about 500 people.

The tremors were also felt in Boston. John D. Tuerck told the Times he felt "a discernible swaying on the 18th floor" of his office tower -- "Not something one expects here, for sure."

In Rockville, Md., 10 miles north of Washington, the quake was felt for 20-30 seconds. It started slowly but built into an event that shook houses. One man said he could see the windows shake on neighbors' houses.

Lea Cook was on the telephone in her fifth-floor office in Upper St. Clair, south of Pittsburgh, when the building started to shake.

"My heart stopped," she said. "I flew down five flights of stairs to get outside."

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UPI's Gerry Harrington said he was in a Panera Bread restaurant in Kingston, N.Y., about 90 miles north of New York City when he "realized the table was rocking and the floor was undulating. I didn't know what to make of it at first. I looked around and saw the restaurant's hanging lights swinging. I quickly got up and left the restaurant, still not sure what was going on but thinking parts of the building might collapse. I asked people eating outside if they felt the Earth move and they said yes. The whole thing was a very strange, disorienting experience."

The quake stopped a tennis event in New Haven, Conn., and shook the field during an afternoon baseball game between the Mariners and Indians in Cleveland.

Play at the New Haven Open on the campus of Yale University was stopped after the shock of the earthquake shook the stadium. The building was also evacuated and matches resumed after a about three hours

The Virginia quake followed an 5.2-magnitude quake in Colorado Monday night. The quake struck at 2.5 miles depth, about 180 miles south of Denver and was the strongest in the area in more than 40 years.

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