More From the Los Angeles Times
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Sept. 19, 2024
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Tourists and residents on the Greek island of Kos find rubble-strewn streets and damaged buildings the morning after a strong earthquake struck the region.
(Louisa Gouliamaki / AFP/Getty Images)A powerful overnight earthquake shook holiday resorts in Greece and Turkey, leaving hundreds of people injured and at least two tourists dead on the Greek island of Kos, where revelers at a bar were crushed in a building collapse.
A pier at the main port on the Greek island of Kos was cracked apart by a magnitude 6.5 earthquake that struck the region.
(Louisa Gouliamaki / AFP/Getty Images)Emergency workers attend to a person injured in an earthquake on the Greek island of Kos.
(Costs Metaxakis / AFP/Getty Images)Tourists wait outside the airport terminal on the island of Kos on July 21, 2017, after a magnitude 6.5 earthquake struck the region.
(Louisa Gouliamaki / AFP/Getty Images)The remains of a bar where two people were killed when the earthquake struck Kos.
(Michael Probst / Associated Press)A church damaged in the earthquake on the Greek island of Kos.
(Giannis Kiaris / EPA)A man looks at a jumble of damaged boats lifted ashore and left on a beach when a small tsunami caused by a magnitude 6.5 earthquake hit Bodrum, Turkey.
(AFP / Getty Images)A car damaged by the overnight earthquake in Bodrum, Turkey.
(Yasar Anter / Associated Press)Supermarket shelves were left in shambles by the earthquake on the Greek island of Kos.
(Giannis Kiaris / EPA)People stand outside damaged buildings in a street filled with rubble after an earthquake on the Greek island of Kos.
(AFP / Getty Images)Sept. 19, 2024