A 7.3-magnitude earthquake hit Nepal on Tuesday, killing at least 42 people and triggering renewed panic on the devastated streets of Kathmandu.
The temblor came less than three weeks after 8,000 people died when a 7.8-magnitude quake rocked the Himalayan country on April 25.
“It was completely unexpected,” 21-year-old nursing student Shristi Mainali told NBC News from Kathmandu. “At first we just felt like a shake, and we thought it was normal, we are having aftershock, but it didn’t stop, so we got up and rushed to our garden. We could see the ground moving, shaking … in that moment you cannot differentiate whether it’s the ground is shaking or it’s your legs shaking.”
David Chen, a 32-year-old who is from San Francisco, was at the ancient Changu Narayan outside Kathmandu when the quake hit.
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“There had been aftershocks but they had all been very quick, just a few seconds. But this one, it just seemed liked it would never stop,” said Chen, who was in Nepal helping map UNESCO world heritage sites as the director of engineering for San Francisco-based firm Skycatch. “It was really scary.”
Nepal’s National Emergency Operation Centre confirmed 42 deaths, with at least 1,117 others injured.
The U.S. Geological Survey reported the epicenter of Tuesday’s quake was close to Everest Base Campand the Chinese border — about 51 miles east of Kathmandu.
It struck at a depth of around 11 miles. The April 25 quake was measured at 9.3 miles. Shallower earthquakes tend to cause more damage at the surface.
The USGS initially reported Tuesday’s earthquake as being 7.4-magnitude but later downgraded the figure. It was followed over the course of about 30 minutes by further tremors registering magnitudes of 5.6 and 6.3.
Richard Ragan, emergency coordinator for the UN’s World Food Program in Nepal, said that initial reports suggested that some “structures collapsed, probably structures that were already in disrepair.” However, he added that Tuesday’s quake “doesn’t appear to have cause a lot of damage” in Kathmandu itself.
Shockwaves were felt across northern India and as far away as New Delhi — which is located about 550 miles west of the epicenter. Buildings swayed for more than a minute in the Indian capital and people scurried into the streets.
Mark South, a British Red Cross worker based in Kathmandu, said the tremors were big enough to “scare the living daylights out of everybody.”








