A 6.1-magnitude earthquake hit off the Greek islands of Crete and Santorini on Thursday, the US Geological Survey said. The strong quake struck 82 kilometres (51 miles) northeast of Crete's capital Heraklion, at a depth of 68 kilometres, the USGS said.
The region popular with tourists has been rattled by multiple tremors in recent months, prompting schools in Santorini and neighbouring islands to close temporarily.
Thousands of earthquakes, mainly of low magnitude, were recorded from late January between the islands of Santorini, Amorgos, Ios and Anafi in the Cyclades group southeast of the Greek mainland.
The seismic swarm caused no casualties or significant damage.
Located where the African and Anatolian tectonic plates converge, the Aegean Sea is often hit by quakes.
But the region had not experienced a phenomenon of such magnitude since records began in 1964, experts said.
The region popular with tourists has been rattled by multiple tremors in recent months, prompting schools in Santorini and neighbouring islands to close temporarily.
Thousands of earthquakes, mainly of low magnitude, were recorded from late January between the islands of Santorini, Amorgos, Ios and Anafi in the Cyclades group southeast of the Greek mainland.
The seismic swarm caused no casualties or significant damage.
Located where the African and Anatolian tectonic plates converge, the Aegean Sea is often hit by quakes.
But the region had not experienced a phenomenon of such magnitude since records began in 1964, experts said.
You may also like
Manipur: 48-hour shutdown cripples life in valley region, no untoward incident reported
Actor-politician Vijay's TVK considering cricket bat, whistle as election symbol
Iceland adds 'steak dispensers' to stores in major shoplifting crackdown
Budget Getaways Near Delhi: Enjoy a Cool and Peaceful Summer Vacation Without Breaking the Bank
Lions icon claims Marcus Smith should've been snubbed in favour of England rival