Map showing earthquake shake intensity in the Gulf of America, indicating shaking felt over 450 miles away from the epicenter near Cuba.

A magnitude 6.1 earthquake struck northwest Cuba on Monday afternoon at 2 pm ET.

This is the strongest earthquake in the region in 150 years.

Shaking was felt 450 miles away in Orlando, Florida, and Mexico.

There were no tsunami warnings.

Buildings shook in Miami.

Shocked residents reported that lamps were shaking and windows were rattling.

WATCH:

AP reported:

A historically strong earthquake struck off Cuba’s northwest coast on Monday, according to official reports, shaking parts of Cuba, Mexico and Florida that are typically not prone to quakes.

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) measured the quake at a magnitude 6.1 at a shallow depth of 26 km (16 miles) and its epicenter 104 km west-northwest of Mantua, Cuba, about two to four hours by car from the capital Havana.

Monday’s earthquake was unusual for this area of the Caribbean, said Paul Earle, a seismologist at the USGS, noting that the quake occurred within a tectonic plate, where earthquakes are usually more scattered and less frequent than when they occur along plate boundaries.

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