Japan has been rocked by a 6.2 magnitude earthquake off its western coast.
The tremor struck on the west coast of Honshu on Tuesday, at a depth of five miles (8km), the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre said.
No tsunami warning was issued, Japanese public broadcaster NHK reported. There were no immediate reports of damage.
Rail firm JR West have announced that bullet trains between Toyama and Kanazawa on the Hokuriku Shinkansen line have been suspended due to the quake.
Another quake, which occurred at 10:47pm on Tuesday local time measured a lower 5 on Japan’s seismic scale of 7 in Noto, a region in Ishikawa, reports suggest.
Recovery efforts are still continuing there after a devastating earthquake struck on New Year’s Day.
The quake is estimated to have occurred at a depth of around 10km (6.2 miles) off the prefecture’s western coast, as per local reports.
Japan is among the most earthquake-prone countries in the world globally, due it sitting across four converging tectonic plates that grind together, contantly, Nature explains.
The country sees some 1,500 earthquakes anually, although most are too mild to be perceptible.
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