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List of earthquakes in Romania

Updated: Wikipedia source

List of earthquakes in Romania

This is a list of earthquakes in Romania, including any notable historical earthquakes that have epicenters within the current boundaries of Romania, or which caused significant effects in this area.

Infobox

Largest
7.9 Mw1802 Vrancea earthquake
Deadliest
7.2 Mw1977 Vrancea earthquake 1,578 killed

Tables

· Earthquakes
10 July 455
10 July 455
Date
10 July 455
Damage
It destroyed several towns and villages in Transylvania.
543?–545?
543?–545?
Date
543?–545?
Epicenter
Dionysopolis, Dobrich Province
Mag.
7.5
Damage
Large tsunami on the Dobrujan shore of the Black Sea. The Roman fortress of Capidava, Constanța County, is destroyed.
August 815
August 815
Date
August 815
Damage
Strong earthquakes, for five days, from the Balkans to the Carpathians, resulting in severe damage.
6 July 1092
6 July 1092
Date
6 July 1092
Damage
Catastrophic earthquakes lasting eight days causes huge losses in the Tisza area, also affecting Sătmar.
25 January 1348
25 January 1348
Date
25 January 1348
Damage
Large earthquake in the Danube basin. 40 shocks in one day, strongly felt in Hungary, Italy, southern Germany, etc.
5 June 1443
5 June 1443
Date
5 June 1443
Epicenter
Pannonian Plain
Damage
Parts of the Royal Palace, walls of the Citadel of Angevins and many other buildings in Temesvár collapse. The St. Ladislau Cathedral in Várad is destroyed.
29 August 1471
29 August 1471
Date
29 August 1471
Mag.
7.1
Intensity
VIII–IX
Damage
The church of Neamț Monastery and the Neboisei Tower of Suceava Fortress are severely damaged. In Brașov, a part of Mount Tâmpa slips over the city, and the citadel of Radu cel Frumos in Bucharest is reported in ruins.
24 November 1516
24 November 1516
Date
24 November 1516
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Damage
Several houses destroyed and significant damage to surrounding wall of Brassó. Also felt in Suceava.
19 November 1523
19 November 1523
Date
19 November 1523
Epicenter
Mediaș, Sibiu County
Mag.
4.7
Intensity
VII
Damage
Light damage reported in Meggyes. The pillars of Evangelical Church in Sebeș collapse. Album Oltardianum indicates 20 houses collapsed in Sibiu, while the Chronicle of Hutter reports many deaths among old population.
26 October 1550
26 October 1550
Date
26 October 1550
Mag.
6.5
Intensity
VII–X
Damage
Large earthquake in southern Transylvania.
10 August 1590
10 August 1590
Date
10 August 1590
Mag.
6.5
Intensity
VII–X
Damage
Large earthquake in southeastern Transylvania, with disastrous effects in Brașov, Râșnov, Sibiu and Mediaș.
5 May 1603
5 May 1603
Date
5 May 1603
Damage
The strongest earthquake ever recorded inside the Carpathian arch. Also felt in Košice, Slovakia.
8 November 1620
8 November 1620
Date
8 November 1620
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.9
Intensity
VIII–IX
9 August 1679
9 August 1679
Date
9 August 1679
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.7
Intensity
VIII
18 August 1681
18 August 1681
Date
18 August 1681
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.1
Intensity
VIII
Damage
The earthquake damages a dungeon in Suceava Fortress, in Moldavia.
11 June 1738
11 June 1738
Date
11 June 1738
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.7
Intensity
IX–X
Damage
Main article: 1738 Vrancea earthquake Four mosques collapse in Nicopolis, the fortress of Niš, on the Serbian side of the Danube, reports significant damage. 11 monasteries, 15 houses, 15 towers and a church steeple collapse in Iași, while the walls and tower of the Prince's Court in Bucharest are destroyed.
26 October 1802
26 October 1802
Date
26 October 1802
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.9–8.2
Intensity
IX
Deaths
4
Damage
Main article: 1802 Vrancea earthquake Chronicles and records of the Orthodox Church indicate extensive damage to churches and tall buildings in Bucharest. This is the strongest earthquake ever recorded in Romania, known by contemporary documents as "great earthquake of Good Friday". Felt on an area of 2 million km2. Despite its intensity, only four people were killed.
1 July 1829
1 July 1829
Date
1 July 1829
Epicenter
Ier Valley, Szatmár County
Damage
Significant damage in Carei and Satu Mare.
26 November 1829
26 November 1829
Date
26 November 1829
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.3
Intensity
VIII–IX
Damage
The earthquake occurs on Thursday morning, at 4 o'clock, causing great panic among population. In Bucharest, 150 stone houses are destroyed or severely damaged. Felt over a very large area from Tisza to Bug and from Mureș to the Danube.
23 January 1838
23 January 1838
Date
23 January 1838
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.5
Intensity
IX
Deaths
73
Injuries
14
Damage
Main article: 1838 Vrancea earthquake 73 deaths were recorded across the country, of which eight only in Bucharest. In Wallachia, 217 churches collapsed or were severely damaged. A massive landslide barred the Bicaz River, forming the Red Lake.
13 November 1868
13 November 1868
Date
13 November 1868
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.4
Intensity
VII–VIII
10 October 1879
10 October 1879
Date
10 October 1879
Epicenter
Moldova Nouă, Caraș-Severin County
Mag.
5.3
Intensity
VIII
Damage
The earthquake was followed by three aftershocks with magnitude over 4.1.
3 October 1880
3 October 1880
Date
3 October 1880
Epicenter
Mihai Viteazu, Cluj County
Mag.
5.3
Intensity
VIII
31 August 1894
31 August 1894
Date
31 August 1894
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.1
Intensity
VIII
Damage
Occurred at 2:20 p.m. Underground noises reported in Panciu, Adjud and Focșani.
31 March 1901
31 March 1901
Date
31 March 1901
Epicenter
Shabla, Dobrich Province
Mag.
7.2
Intensity
X
Damage
Main article: 1901 Black Sea earthquake A 4 m high tsunami devastates localities on the shore of the Black Sea. Large landslides reported in Dobrich Province. Light damage to buildings in Bucharest.
6 February 1904
6 February 1904
Date
6 February 1904
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.6
Intensity
VI
6 October 1908
6 October 1908
Date
6 October 1908
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.6
Intensity
VIII
Damage
The earthquake had three explosive moments at an interval of three minutes. The last phase generated "frightening jolts" and "formidable underground rumble". It damaged old houses in Bucharest, eastern Wallachia and southern Moldavia.
25 May 1912
25 May 1912
Date
25 May 1912
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.7
Intensity
VII
29 March 1934
29 March 1934
Date
29 March 1934
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.7
Intensity
VII
10 November 1940
10 November 1940
Date
10 November 1940
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.7
Intensity
IX
Deaths
1,000
Injuries
4,000
Damage
Main article: 1940 Vrancea earthquake This was the strongest earthquake recorded in the 20th century in Romania. Its effects were devastating in central and southern Moldavia, but also in Wallachia. The death toll was estimated at 1,000, with an additional figure of 4,000 wounded, mostly in Moldavia. The earthquake was felt in Bucharest, where there were about 300 deaths, mostly from the collapse of Carlton Bloc.
7 September 1945
7 September 1945
Date
7 September 1945
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.8
Intensity
VII–VIII
9 December 1945
9 December 1945
Date
9 December 1945
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.5
Intensity
VII
4 March 1977
4 March 1977
Date
4 March 1977
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.4
Intensity
VII–IX
Deaths
1,578
Injuries
11,221
Damage
Main article: 1977 Vrancea earthquake 1,578 dead and 11,221 injured in Romania. 120 dead and 165 injured in Bulgaria. Two dead in Moldova. Felt from Rome to Moscow and from Turkey to Finland. A World Bank report indicates damage worth US$2.048 billion.
30 August 1986
30 August 1986
Date
30 August 1986
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
7.1
Intensity
VIII
Deaths
150
Injuries
558
Damage
Main article: 1986 Vrancea earthquake Officially, two dead and 558 injured. In Chișinău, four apartment buildings collapsed, resulting in at least 100 casualties. In Bucharest, 50 workers were killed in the basement of a building, crushed by piles of rubble. The information was never confirmed. Over 50,000 houses were damaged.
30 May 1990
30 May 1990
Date
30 May 1990
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.9
Intensity
VIII
Deaths
14
Injuries
362
Damage
Main article: 1990 Vrancea earthquakes 14 dead and 362 injured. Severe damage reported on large areas in Romania, Moldova and Bulgaria. Munich Re indicates economic losses of US$30 million.
31 May 1990
31 May 1990
Date
31 May 1990
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
6.4
Intensity
VII
Damage
Main article: 1990 Vrancea earthquakes This was the strongest aftershock of the 30 May mainshock.
12 July 1991
12 July 1991
Date
12 July 1991
Epicenter
Banloc, Timiș County
Mag.
5.6
Intensity
VIII
Deaths
2
Injuries
30
Damage
5,000 rural buildings and a monumental church of German architecture are damaged. 2 dead, 30 injured, hundreds to thousands displaced due to severe damage to buildings.
2 December 1991
2 December 1991
Date
2 December 1991
Epicenter
Voiteg, Timiș County
Mag.
5.5
Intensity
VII
Injuries
Some
Damage
Some injured, serious damage in Voiteg (5,000 houses), 4,500 displaced.
24 May 2002
24 May 2002
Date
24 May 2002
Epicenter
Caraș-Severin County
Mag.
4.7
Intensity
V
Injuries
5
Damage
Five people were injured and some houses slightly damaged.
27 October 2004
27 October 2004
Date
27 October 2004
Epicenter
Năruja, Vrancea County
Mag.
5.9
Intensity
V
Damage
Old buildings were slightly damaged. Blackouts were reported in epicentral area.
22 November 2014
22 November 2014
Date
22 November 2014
Epicenter
Panciu, Vrancea County
Mag.
5.7
Intensity
V
Injuries
14
Damage
Main article: 2014 Vrancea earthquake Cracks in walls and roads were reported in Galați and Tulcea. Telephone network and power supply were disrupted in epicentral area. One man was injured in Tulcea. Eight people were injured in Galați and five hypertensive people in Brăila needed medical care because of panic attacks.
24 September 2016
24 September 2016
Date
24 September 2016
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
5.6
Intensity
VI
Injuries
2
Damage
In Iași, a young man jumped out a window, suffering a fracture, and an old woman hurt herself in her house, while 12 people suffered panic attacks.
28 October 2018
28 October 2018
Date
28 October 2018
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
5.5
Intensity
VI
Damage
In Bucharest, an old house was slightly damaged. The Bucharest–Ilfov Ambulance Service registered 25 calls for panic attacks. Power supply was briefly disrupted in Întorsura Buzăului, close to the epicenter.
31 January 2020
31 January 2020
Date
31 January 2020
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
5.2
Intensity
V
Damage
It happened at 03:26.
3 November 2022
3 November 2022
Date
3 November 2022
Epicenter
Vrancea County
Mag.
5.4
Intensity
V
13 February 2023
13 February 2023
Date
13 February 2023
Epicenter
Gorj County
Mag.
5.0
Intensity
VII
Damage
A foreshock of the 14 February Gorj earthquake.
14 February 2023
14 February 2023
Date
14 February 2023
Epicenter
Gorj County
Mag.
5.6
Intensity
VIII
Injuries
4
Damage
22 localities affected in five counties – Gorj, Dolj, Hunedoara, Mehedinți and Vâlcea. Four people in Gorj injured by detached construction elements. 48 buildings slightly damaged in Târgu Jiu, close to the epicenter.
The inclusion criteria for adding events are based on WikiProject Earthquakes' notability guideline that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described are also applicable to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded.
The inclusion criteria for adding events are based on WikiProject Earthquakes' notability guideline that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described are also applicable to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded.
Date
The inclusion criteria for adding events are based on WikiProject Earthquakes' notability guideline that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described are also applicable to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded.
Date
Epicenter
Mag.
Intensity
Deaths
Injuries
Damage
10 July 455
It destroyed several towns and villages in Transylvania.
543?–545?
Dionysopolis, Dobrich Province
7.5
Large tsunami on the Dobrujan shore of the Black Sea. The Roman fortress of Capidava, Constanța County, is destroyed.
August 815
Strong earthquakes, for five days, from the Balkans to the Carpathians, resulting in severe damage.
6 July 1092
Catastrophic earthquakes lasting eight days causes huge losses in the Tisza area, also affecting Sătmar.
25 January 1348
Large earthquake in the Danube basin. 40 shocks in one day, strongly felt in Hungary, Italy, southern Germany, etc.
5 June 1443
Pannonian Plain
Parts of the Royal Palace, walls of the Citadel of Angevins and many other buildings in Temesvár collapse. The St. Ladislau Cathedral in Várad is destroyed.
29 August 1471
7.1
VIII–IX
The church of Neamț Monastery and the Neboisei Tower of Suceava Fortress are severely damaged. In Brașov, a part of Mount Tâmpa slips over the city, and the citadel of Radu cel Frumos in Bucharest is reported in ruins.
24 November 1516
Vrancea County
Several houses destroyed and significant damage to surrounding wall of Brassó. Also felt in Suceava.
19 November 1523
Mediaș, Sibiu County
4.7
VII
Light damage reported in Meggyes. The pillars of Evangelical Church in Sebeș collapse. Album Oltardianum indicates 20 houses collapsed in Sibiu, while the Chronicle of Hutter reports many deaths among old population.
26 October 1550
6.5
VII–X
Large earthquake in southern Transylvania.
10 August 1590
6.5
VII–X
Large earthquake in southeastern Transylvania, with disastrous effects in Brașov, Râșnov, Sibiu and Mediaș.
5 May 1603
The strongest earthquake ever recorded inside the Carpathian arch. Also felt in Košice, Slovakia.
8 November 1620
Vrancea County
6.9
VIII–IX
9 August 1679
Vrancea County
6.7
VIII
18 August 1681
Vrancea County
7.1
VIII
The earthquake damages a dungeon in Suceava Fortress, in Moldavia.
11 June 1738
Vrancea County
7.7
IX–X
Main article: 1738 Vrancea earthquake Four mosques collapse in Nicopolis, the fortress of Niš, on the Serbian side of the Danube, reports significant damage. 11 monasteries, 15 houses, 15 towers and a church steeple collapse in Iași, while the walls and tower of the Prince's Court in Bucharest are destroyed.
26 October 1802
Vrancea County
7.9–8.2
IX
4
Main article: 1802 Vrancea earthquake Chronicles and records of the Orthodox Church indicate extensive damage to churches and tall buildings in Bucharest. This is the strongest earthquake ever recorded in Romania, known by contemporary documents as "great earthquake of Good Friday". Felt on an area of 2 million km2. Despite its intensity, only four people were killed.
1 July 1829
Ier Valley, Szatmár County
Significant damage in Carei and Satu Mare.
26 November 1829
Vrancea County
7.3
VIII–IX
The earthquake occurs on Thursday morning, at 4 o'clock, causing great panic among population. In Bucharest, 150 stone houses are destroyed or severely damaged. Felt over a very large area from Tisza to Bug and from Mureș to the Danube.
23 January 1838
Vrancea County
7.5
IX
73
14
Main article: 1838 Vrancea earthquake 73 deaths were recorded across the country, of which eight only in Bucharest. In Wallachia, 217 churches collapsed or were severely damaged. A massive landslide barred the Bicaz River, forming the Red Lake.
13 November 1868
Vrancea County
6.4
VII–VIII
10 October 1879
Moldova Nouă, Caraș-Severin County
5.3
VIII
The earthquake was followed by three aftershocks with magnitude over 4.1.
3 October 1880
Mihai Viteazu, Cluj County
5.3
VIII
31 August 1894
Vrancea County
7.1
VIII
Occurred at 2:20 p.m. Underground noises reported in Panciu, Adjud and Focșani.
31 March 1901
Shabla, Dobrich Province
7.2
X
Main article: 1901 Black Sea earthquake A 4 m high tsunami devastates localities on the shore of the Black Sea. Large landslides reported in Dobrich Province. Light damage to buildings in Bucharest.
6 February 1904
Vrancea County
6.6
VI
6 October 1908
Vrancea County
6.6
VIII
The earthquake had three explosive moments at an interval of three minutes. The last phase generated "frightening jolts" and "formidable underground rumble". It damaged old houses in Bucharest, eastern Wallachia and southern Moldavia.
25 May 1912
Vrancea County
6.7
VII
29 March 1934
Vrancea County
6.7
VII
10 November 1940
Vrancea County
7.7
IX
1,000
4,000
Main article: 1940 Vrancea earthquake This was the strongest earthquake recorded in the 20th century in Romania. Its effects were devastating in central and southern Moldavia, but also in Wallachia. The death toll was estimated at 1,000, with an additional figure of 4,000 wounded, mostly in Moldavia. The earthquake was felt in Bucharest, where there were about 300 deaths, mostly from the collapse of Carlton Bloc.
7 September 1945
Vrancea County
6.8
VII–VIII
9 December 1945
Vrancea County
6.5
VII
4 March 1977
Vrancea County
7.4
VII–IX
1,578
11,221
Main article: 1977 Vrancea earthquake 1,578 dead and 11,221 injured in Romania. 120 dead and 165 injured in Bulgaria. Two dead in Moldova. Felt from Rome to Moscow and from Turkey to Finland. A World Bank report indicates damage worth US$2.048 billion.
30 August 1986
Vrancea County
7.1
VIII
150
558
Main article: 1986 Vrancea earthquake Officially, two dead and 558 injured. In Chișinău, four apartment buildings collapsed, resulting in at least 100 casualties. In Bucharest, 50 workers were killed in the basement of a building, crushed by piles of rubble. The information was never confirmed. Over 50,000 houses were damaged.
30 May 1990
Vrancea County
6.9
VIII
14
362
Main article: 1990 Vrancea earthquakes 14 dead and 362 injured. Severe damage reported on large areas in Romania, Moldova and Bulgaria. Munich Re indicates economic losses of US$30 million.
31 May 1990
Vrancea County
6.4
VII
Main article: 1990 Vrancea earthquakes This was the strongest aftershock of the 30 May mainshock.
12 July 1991
Banloc, Timiș County
5.6
VIII
2
30
5,000 rural buildings and a monumental church of German architecture are damaged. 2 dead, 30 injured, hundreds to thousands displaced due to severe damage to buildings.
2 December 1991
Voiteg, Timiș County
5.5
VII
Some
Some injured, serious damage in Voiteg (5,000 houses), 4,500 displaced.
24 May 2002
Caraș-Severin County
4.7
V
5
Five people were injured and some houses slightly damaged.
27 October 2004
Năruja, Vrancea County
5.9
V
Old buildings were slightly damaged. Blackouts were reported in epicentral area.
22 November 2014
Panciu, Vrancea County
5.7
V
14
Main article: 2014 Vrancea earthquake Cracks in walls and roads were reported in Galați and Tulcea. Telephone network and power supply were disrupted in epicentral area. One man was injured in Tulcea. Eight people were injured in Galați and five hypertensive people in Brăila needed medical care because of panic attacks.
24 September 2016
Vrancea County
5.6
VI
2
In Iași, a young man jumped out a window, suffering a fracture, and an old woman hurt herself in her house, while 12 people suffered panic attacks.
28 October 2018
Vrancea County
5.5
VI
In Bucharest, an old house was slightly damaged. The Bucharest–Ilfov Ambulance Service registered 25 calls for panic attacks. Power supply was briefly disrupted in Întorsura Buzăului, close to the epicenter.
31 January 2020
Vrancea County
5.2
V
It happened at 03:26.
3 November 2022
Vrancea County
5.4
V
13 February 2023
Gorj County
5.0
VII
A foreshock of the 14 February Gorj earthquake.
14 February 2023
Gorj County
5.6
VIII
4
22 localities affected in five counties – Gorj, Dolj, Hunedoara, Mehedinți and Vâlcea. Four people in Gorj injured by detached construction elements. 48 buildings slightly damaged in Târgu Jiu, close to the epicenter.
The inclusion criteria for adding events are based on WikiProject Earthquakes' notability guideline that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described are also applicable to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded.

References

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  20. Adevărul
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  25. Timișoara Express
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  31. Human casualties due to the Vrancea, Romania earthquakes of 1940 and 1977: learning from past to prepare for future events
  32. The 14th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering
    http://www.iitk.ac.in/nicee/wcee/article/14_S29-002.PDF
  33. The 14th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering
    http://www.iitk.ac.in/nicee/wcee/article/14_10-0013.PDF
  34. "Significant Earthquakes of the World, 1977"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eqarchives/significant/sig_1977.php
  35. Preliminary report of the March 4, 1977, Romania earthquake
    https://www.eeri.org/lfe/pdf/Romania_Vrancea_PrelimReport_May77.pdf
  36. "Significant Earthquakes of the World, 1986"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eqarchives/significant/sig_1986.php
  37. The Romanian Earthquake of August 30, 1986: A Study Based on GEOSCOPE Very Long-Period and Broadband Data
    http://seismo.berkeley.edu/~barbara/REPRINTS/romania-pageoph90.pdf
  38. Jurnalul Național
    https://web.archive.org/web/20150203083835/http://jurnalul.ro/special-jurnalul/radiojurnalul-zilei-31-mai-1990-545165.html
  39. GEMECD
    https://web.archive.org/web/20150203100802/http://gemecd.org/event/171
  40. "M 5.6 - 2 km S of Livezile, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/usp0004u1p/executive
  41. Roeduseis
    http://www.roeduseis.ro/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Poster_9_Timisoara-si-seismele-banatene.pdf
  42. Adevărul
    http://adevarul.ro/locale/timisoara/cum-trait-cei-banloc-mai-mare-cutremur-istoria-banatului-a-urlat-pamantul-zis-vine-sfarsitul-lumii-1_50ad94f27c42d5a66397a9bb/index.html
  43. "M 5.5 - 1 km SW of Ciacova, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/usp0004zxr/executive
  44. "M 4.7 – 2 km ESE of Pojejena, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/usp000b4ww/executive
  45. "M 5.9 - 7 km W of Paltin, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/usp000d778/executive
  46. Ziua de Constanța
    http://www.ziuaconstanta.ro/stiri/actualitate/minunea-de-la-constanta-27-octombrie-2004-cel-mai-mare-cutremur-al-ultimilor-zece-ani-din-romania-517800.html
  47. Gândul
    http://www.gandul.info/stiri/retele-de-telefonie-si-curent-picate-sosele-crapate-mobila-distrusa-in-apartamente-efectele-cutremurului-de-5-7-grade-de-sambata-seara-13622367
  48. Monitorul de Galați
    https://web.archive.org/web/20150204051325/http://www.monitoruldegalati.ro/evenimente/31040-panica-dupa-cutremur.html
  49. Obiectiv Vocea Brăilei
    https://web.archive.org/web/20141127012413/http://www.obiectivbr.ro/fara-pagube-materiale-dar-cu-multa-panica_id99255
  50. "M 5.6 - 7 km WNW of Nereju Mic, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/us10006s5c/executive
  51. Ziare.com
    http://www.ziare.com/stiri/cutremur/cutremur-de-5-6-grade-in-romania-1437446
  52. "M 5.5 - 15 km SE of Comand?u, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/us1000hi43/executive
  53. Digi24
    https://www.digi24.ro/stiri/actualitate/cutremur-de-57-pe-scara-richter-in-romania-1021745
  54. Știrile Pro TV
    https://stirileprotv.ro/stiri/actualitate/cutremur-cu-magnitudinea-5-6-resimtit-si-in-bucuresti.html
  55. Romania Insider
    https://www.romania-insider.com/earthquake-romania-january-2020
  56. "M 5.0 – 0 km S of Dobrița, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/?currentFeatureId=us6000jnl6&extent=44.56601,22.23495&extent=45.42737,24.43222&listOnlyShown=true
  57. "M 5.6 - 0 km ESE of Lele?ti, Romania"
    https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/us6000jnqz/
  58. Euronews România
    https://www.euronews.ro/articole/dsu-22-de-localitati-din-cinci-judete-afectate-de-cutremurul-care-a-avut-loc-in-o
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