Some felt "dizzy," others felt as if their chairs were pulled by "invisible 
hands," but an earthquake that jolted a county near the Chinese capital at 
midday yesterday seemed not to have wrecked significant damage to people or 
property.
 
 
  | 
   | 
 
  | 
 A 
 villager points at the broken roof of his house after an 
 earthquake measuring 5.1 degrees on the Richter scale jolted Wen'an 
 County, north China's Hebei Province at 11:56 a.m. (Beijing Time) Tuesday, 
 July 4, 2006. [Reuters] | 
"The quake, measuring 5.1 on the Richter scale, caused no injury to either 
humans or animals, except leaving cracks on at least 210 houses," said Ma 
Yingcai, an official in Wen'an County in North China's Hebei Province, which 
borders Beijing.
Immediately following the quake, which struck at 11:56 am, the local 
government set up a rescue headquarters, sending assessment staff to villages, 
and used TV and loudspeakers to inform the 430,000 residents what had happened, 
he said.
People whose homes were damaged have been relocated, he added.
Aftershocks were expected to strike the region, but they would probably be 
smaller than the midday quake, Huang Jianfa, a division director of the China 
Earthquake Administration, told China Daily.
"It is normal for less severe aftershocks to occur within a week following a 
major tremor," said Huang.
Huang was among a team sent in by the earthquake agency early yesterday 
afternoon to enhance monitoring and assess damage in Wen'an.
At least 17 earthquakes similar to the one in Wen'an occur in China every 
year, Huang said.
The impact on the county was far lighter than expected, and it seemed the 
earthquake had aroused stronger reactions in Beijing and Tianjin than in Wen'an, 
where life was all but unscathed, he later told a news briefing.
A scheduled open-air movie showing went ahead as planned in Wen'an last 
night, with several hundred people watching in a square in front of the county 
government, with pedestrians and traffic filling the streets as usual.
In Wenxinyang Village, near the county downtown, 360 
pupils in a primary school will continue their classes elsewhere today, after 
big cracks appeared in their school, leading to it being classified "a dangerous 
building," schoolmaster Ma Jinming said.