Story highlights
NEW: An evacuation order is reissued along parts of the coast
NEW: Three people were injured, emergency officials say
NEW: The quake was at a depth of more than 20 miles
There are no immediate reports of major damage
A 7.1-magnitude earthquake hit central Chile on Sunday, injuring three people and prompting emergency officials to order an evacuation along parts of the coast.
There were no immediate reports of major damage.
The earthquake was at a depth of 21.6 miles (34.8 km) and struck 16 miles (27 km) north-northwest of Talca, the U.S. Geological Survey said. It had originally reported the quake was offshore and had a magnitude of 7.2.
No tsunami warning was issued and authorities initially canceled an evacuation order that had been issued for parts of the coast. They reissued that order late Sunday as a preventative measure.
Three people were injured as a result of the quake, emergency officials said. One person was in a traffic accident in the Biobio region and two people sustained light injuries when a ceiling collapsed.
Talca was one of the cities hit hard by a devastating 8.8-magnitude earthquake in 2010.