Drone footage released by Italy's fire and rescue corps shows the devastating aftermath of the magnitude 6.6 earthquake that hit central and southern Italy on Sunday morning.
The
video, taken over the town of Amatrice, revealed demolished buildings,
crumbling façades and streets clogged with debris. The town of about
1,000 people was also battered by Italy's Aug. 24 earthquake and a
series of aftershocks last week.
Sunday's earthquake is potentially Italy's largest earthquake since a magnitude 6.9 quake struck southern Italy in 1980, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
"These
earthquakes are bringing all of central Italy to its knees," Giuseppe
Pezzanesi, mayor of the town of Tolentino, told the Associated Press.
The Oct. 30 temblor struck at 7:40 a.m. local time and was centered in Norcia, about 35 miles from Amatrice.
There
were no immediate reports of deaths, although last week's aftershocks
left thousands of Italians homeless. The magnitude 6.2 earthquake in
August also struck near Norcia and killed nearly 300 people.
In
Amatrice, the nearly 600-year-old St. Augustine church crumbled on
Sunday after surviving previous earthquakes, according to Italy's Vigili
del Fuoco (literally "Firewatchers" in Italian).
The church's rooftop sustained damage last week, but the building was still standing as of Oct. 28.
Italy is particularly prone to earthquakes for a mix of geographical reasons, seismologists previously told Mashable.
Italy
and its neighboring countries sit at the spot where the Eurasia and
Africa tectonic plates collide. Italy also sits west of a sedimentary
basin in the Mediterranean Sea that is expanding. Meanwhile, the Adria
microplate to Italy's east is slipping beneath Eurasia and the Apennines
Mountains.
Image: European-Mediterranean Seismological Center
On
top of that, many towns in central Italy are built along steep slopes
and are vulnerable to landslides that send buildings tumbling into
valleys.
USGS said
on Sunday the latest earthquake was part of a "complex sequence" of
related temblors occurring on more than one fault segment in central
Italy.
"We
cannot rule out the possibility of similar sized or larger events," the
U.S. agency warned, noting that "the probability of a larger event is
low."
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