The U.S. Geological Survey accidentally sent out an alert about a 6.8-magnitude 
earthquake Wednesday that actually occurred nearly 100 years ago. The USGS said 
the automatic alert was a false alarm based on an earthquake that occurred in 
1925 off the coast of Santa Barbara. Scientists at that California Institute of 
Technology were attempting to relocate the epicenter of the 1925 tremor, and 
their actions were “misinterpreted by software as a current event,” USGS 
officials said. The actual 1925 earthquake destroyed parts of Santa Barbara and 
resulted in damages of around $8 million at the time. Thirteen people died.
READ IT AT AP 
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