Precise Details from USGS Monitoring (Image Credits: Pexels)
Loma Linda, Calif. – A subtle rumble interrupted the evening calm in San Bernardino County as a 3.4-magnitude earthquake centered just southeast of Loma Linda shook the ground around 8:48 p.m. Wednesday.[1][2] The United States Geological Survey pinpointed the epicenter approximately 2.5 miles southeast of the city, at a depth of about 10 miles.[1] Local reports indicated light shaking felt by residents, though no injuries or structural damage surfaced in initial assessments.
Precise Details from USGS Monitoring
The quake registered as magnitude 3.4 on the local magnitude scale, with an automatic review status from the Southern California Seismic Network.[2] Its origin time stood at 03:48:04 UTC on April 30, corresponding to 8:48 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time the previous evening.[2] Coordinates placed the hypocenter at 34.021°N latitude and 117.227°W longitude, roughly 4 kilometers southeast of Loma Linda.[2]
Depth measurements clocked in at 16.1 kilometers, typical for events in this tectonically active zone.[2] Early data from the USGS Did You Feel It? system captured community intensity at level III, signaling weak shaking that rarely causes damage but proves noticeable indoors.[2] Hundreds of responses poured in shortly after, underscoring the event’s reach across the Inland Empire.[3]
Aftershock Adds to the Sequence
Less than a minute later, a 2.7-magnitude aftershock rumbled in the same vicinity, amplifying the brief seismic episode.[4][5] This smaller tremor occurred at a similar depth and location, consistent with patterns following minor mainshocks in the region. Authorities monitored for further activity, but no significant follow-ups emerged in the immediate hours…