Rare 5.9 earthquake shakes up D.C. federal buildings

"Did you feel it?" was the question that boomeranged around Twitter in thousands of tweets after an unusually strong earthquake hit Virginia about 90 miles from Washington, D.C.

A rare medium-strength earthquake struck the Washington, D.C., area at 1:51 p.m. today and prompted the evacuation of the White House, Pentagon, U.S. Capitol and other federal buildings.

The 5.9-magnitude earthquake had its epicenter near Mineral, Va., according to crowdsourced reports published by the U.S. Geological Survey on its Earthquake Hazards Program website. The website invites members of the public to report on events they’ve experienced.

As of 2:00 p.m., there were 612 reports on the page of an earthquake in Virginia. By 2:40 p.m., the number of reports had risen to 2,222.

Hundreds of anecdotal reports on Twitter suggest that the quake was felt along much of the East Coast, and many commercial buildings were evacuated.

According to a report in The Hill newspaper, the White House, Pentagon, Capitol, State Department and Library of Congress were evacuated shortly after the quake.

The Pentagon was reopened to employees in half an hour, according to a report posted on Twitter by @NavyNews.

Police in Richmond, Va., sent a tweet urging people to remain calm but report any injuries or damage to the police via phone or Twitter.

The nuclear reactors at Lake Anna, Va., automatically shut down when the earthquake hit, according to reports quoting the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) tweeted that her staff had moved to an emergency location.

Minutes after the quake, federal officials were wondering what had happened.

"Think we just had an earthquake or something in [Crystal City]. All the bldgs shaking," wrote Mary Davie, assistant commissioner of the General Services Administration's Office of Integrated Technology Services.

It was the strongest earthquake to originate in Virginia since 1897, according to a tweet from NASA's Langley, Va., facility.

USGS published a Shake Map showing the spread of the earthquake’s shock waves from its epicenter between Charlottesville and Richmond.

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