Destructive Mexico Quake 'Reminded Me So, So Much of 1985'

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It's been more than 30 years but Friday morning's quake in Mexico City was a little too familiar for people who lived through the 1985 deadly quake.
Image:
Soldiers remove debris from a partly collapsed municipal building in Juchitan, Oaxaca state, Mexico, felled by a massive earthquake Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. (AP Photo/Luis Alberto Cruz)Luis Alberto Cruz / AP

WASHINGTON --The most powerful earthquake to hit Mexico in 100 years rattled residents in Mexico City early Friday morning, with several saying that they relived what felt like the same deadly earthquake that struck almost exactly 32 years ago and took 10,000 lives.

This earthquake struck just before 1 a.m. Friday, waking many and sending people running into the streets from their homes. At least 26 people in other parts of Mexico had been reported killed as of Friday afternoon.

“Oh my God it reminded me so, so much of 1985. I felt like I was back there again. It was a tremendous scare, very frightening,” Mexico City housewife María Cristina Coutiño Covarrubias told NBC News.

“We all ran out of the house last night and went to the back of the house. My mind kept going back to 1985 and I was so scared that everything was going to come tumbling down on us. It was horrible,” said Coutiño Covarrubias, who lives in a working class neighborhood made up of a cluster of small cement homes within enclosed patios. “The tremor seemed to have lasted forever and that was very frightening. It felt like a giant wave that wouldn’t go away. Thankfully we are all okay but now I worry about the aftershocks.”

Related: Earthquake off Mexico Kills Dozens, Sparks Tsunami Warning

In the hours after the magnitude 8.2 quake struck some 450 miles from the capital off the Pacific coast, Mexican seismologists had reported at least 130 minor aftershocks, and officials were telling residents that a “significant” aftershock could also be expected.

While the temblor was stronger than in 1985, officials said so far there are fewer deaths than the mid-September earthquake of 32 years ago, likely because Friday's quake struck further away from the country’s populous capital city.

Image: Earthquake of magnitude 8.2 on the Richter scale shakes Mexico
Civil Defense Forces members help residents in Tapachula, Mexico, after a 8.2 magtnitude earthquake violently shook Mexico, early on Sept. 8, 2017. EPA/JOSE TORRESJOSE TORRES / EPA

Laura Castellanos Saavedra, a writer living on the first floor of a three-story apartment building in Mexico City, told NBC News the ground felt “spongy” and her building felt as it it was about to collapse.

“I am still so rattled. That was very scary. Being on (the) ground floor, I felt it real intensely. I was laying down (when it started) and all of us in the building went out into the street. This morning I noticed a long crack along the street, and now they’re telling us there are going to be shockwaves. I lived through 1985, but I’ve never felt it as strong and intense as last night.”

While the quake unnerved many in the city, knocked windows out and caused some walls to collapse, the damage was far more severe in the southern states of Chiapas and Oaxaca where there are reports of deaths and collapsed structures.

Image: People gather on a street after an earthquake hit Mexico City
People gather on a street after an earthquake hit Mexico City, Mexico, September 8, 2017. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido TPX IMAGES OF THE DAYEDGARD GARRIDO / Reuters

“We are assessing the damage, which will probably take hours, if not days,” President Enrique Peña Nieto said in an address to the nation early Friday morning. “But the population is safe over all. There should not be a major sense of panic.”

The earthquake caused some swaying of Mexico City's famous landmark, the Angel of Independence monument, but as a resident noted on Twitter, the monument was well secured years ago.

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