Seismologist says ‘no reason for concern’ after 5.2M earthquake on Evia
A seismologist has assured the public there is “no reason for concern” following Tuesday morning’s 5.2-magnitude earthquake on the island of Evia.
A seismologist has assured the public there is “no reason for concern” following Tuesday morning’s 5.2-magnitude earthquake on the island of Evia.
The northern Aegean island of Thasos, home to about 13,000 residents, saw more than 1.5 million arrivals this year, according to figures from the Central Port Authority of Kavala cited by the Athens-Macedonian News Agency on Monday.
Development Minister Takis Theodorikakos, in an interview on Monday with OPEN TV, stated that “we are creating a more productive, more competitive, and more export-oriented economy.”
The government is targeting the large pool of 31,000 prospective borrowers who have been pre-approved to be included in “My Home II” to absorb the 2 billion euros it has committed to the program.
Cyprus’ restaurants and entertainment venues are feeling the squeeze this year.
Around 40 light-years from Earth, seven rocky worlds orbit a cool, red star named Trappist-1. Some of these planets may be habitable to life as we know it, which has led astronomers to point the James Webb Space Telescope at each member of the septuplet.
Greece played a disastrous game against Denmark on Monday and lost 3-0 in Piraeus.
A 5.2 magnitude earthquake hit off the southwestern coast of the island of Evia, Greece’s second largest, shaking the capital Athens, southwest of the tremor’s epicenter. No injuries or damages were immediately reported.
The island of Pserimos has fewer than 100 residents and its main income source is tourism.
Markets had already priced in the fall of the French government, and the Greek bourse only produced a mixed picture on Monday.