A pair of earthquakes that shook northern Israel on Wednesday and Tuesday prompted calls from local council heads to improve municipal and national readiness before disaster strikes.
Israel’s Geological Survey (IGS) reported that a magnitude 3.1 tremor shook the north on Wednesday morning, about 12 hours after a magnitude 3.5 earthquake was felt in the same area on Tuesday evening. The epicenter of the quakes was some 15 kilometers (9 miles) northeast of Beit She’an, according to the IGS.
The Israel Police said its emergency center received dozens of calls from residents in the area, adding that no injuries or damage were reported.
These quakes make for four tremors in the area in the span of less than a month: on Feb. 3, a magnitude 5.4 earthquake occurred in Cyprus and was also felt in Israel. 10 days prior, residents of Tiberias, Tzfat, Yavne’el, Haifa and the Krayot area in northern Israel reported feeling a 4.1 magnitude earthquake, the epicenter of which was 10 miles northeast of Beit She’an, south of the Sea of Galilee.