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  1. Dec 31, 2020 · Just after noon local time on Tuesday, December 29, a 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck central Croatia about 30 miles southeast of the capital, Zagreb, near the towns of Petrinja and Sisak. The ...

  2. First damage report – museum clock stopped at 6 hours and 24 minutes. As if the spread of COVID-19 wasn't enough, last Sunday, March 22, at 6:24 am local time, Zagreb was hit by a 5.4-magnitude earthquake, which unfortunately took a life of a 15-year-old and left more than two dozen people injured. Two days later, with aftershocks and COVID ...

  3. Figure 3-6 – European-Mediterranean Earthquake Catalogue (EMEC), taken from Ustaszewski et al. (2014) amended to include the Zagreb Earthquake 22/03/2020 (Tomljenović, B., 2020) 31 Figure 3-7 – Map showing fault plane solutions past earthquakes in the region since 1938. The beach-balls' radius is scaled with magnitude.

  4. Figure 4 A preliminary intensity map of the earthquake of March 22, 2020 at 5:24 AM (UTC) 28 Figure 5 Temporal succession of earthquakes with magnitudes above 1.0 that oc-curred in the period from March 22 to May 31, 2020 in the Zagreb area 29 Figure 6 3D view of Lower and Upper Town of City of Zagreb buildings based on the usability ...

  5. At 12:19 PM CET (11:19 UTC) on 29 December 2020, an earthquake of magnitude 6.4 Mw (6.2 ML) hit central Croatia, with an epicenter located roughly 3 km (1.9 mi) west-southwest of Petrinja. [1] The maximum felt intensity was estimated at VIII ( Heavily damaging) to IX ( Destructive) on the European macroseismic scale. [2]

  6. For the Proposal of the Act on the Reconstruction of Earthquake-damaged Buildings in the Territory of the City of Zagreb, Krapina-Zagorje County and Zagreb County, public consultations were conducted through the eSavjetovanje portal, in the period from 15 May to 14 June 2020. The processing of received comments and proposals is under way.

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