Earth Changes
The epicenter was near Cartoga, about 180 miles north of Los Angeles.
People at several businesses near Lone Pine and Bishop told ABC News the while the shaking was "intense," they didn't see any damage.
Some shaking was felt in LA.
This comes a day after a 7.4 magnitude quake hit Mexico, near the resort of Huatulco, killing at least six people and damaging hundreds of homes, according to The Associated Press. At least six others were hurt, including two people in Mexico City, more than 300 miles from the epicenter.
Niwa Weather said there were 7347 lightning strikes in the Tasman Sea west of the country by about 3.30pm Wednesday.
Shortly after 7pm, MetService forecaster Sonja Farmer said most lightning was still to the west of Northland although there had been at least one strike in the Far North around the Karikari Peninsula.
"Most of the lightning at the moment is offshore but everything is sinking down over the country, so that all should get closer," she said.
According to locals, the attack took place in district's Sunkot village when Devi was going to a temple with her son Navin. "The entire area is surrounded by forests and leopards have been spotted around the village earlier as well. Devi was going to the village temple with her son when the leopard suddenly jumped out of the forest and attacked her," said Manish Gauni, a panchayat member of the village.
The quake struck the southern state of Oaxaca at 10.29am local time ( 1429 BST) on Tuesday but was felt more than 400 miles away in the capital, Mexico City, where buildings shook and panicked residents fled on to the streets.
Mexican newspapers said there were no immediate reports of damage in the capital. Claudia Sheinbaum, the city's mayor, tweeted: "So far no major incidents [reported]."
The situation near the quake's epicentre in Crucecita, Oaxaca, was not immediately clear.
According to a statement from the country's Interior Ministry, flooding has affected the western regions (oblasts) of Ivano-Frankivsk, Chernivtsi, Zakarpattia and Lviv after heavy rainfall 22 to 23 June. Three people have died in flooding in Verkhovyna district, Ivano-Frankivsk oblast, where roads have been blocked and areas cut off.
Emergency services are carrying out rescue and relief operations in affected areas. Overflowing rivers have destroyed bridges and roads. Power lines have been damaged, as have hundreds of homes.
State Emergency Service of Ukraine (SES) reported on 24 June that a total of 165 settlements in 15 districts have been affected in Ivano-Frankivsk. SES have rescued or evacuated over 350 people and pumped flood water from thousands of damaged homes.
Heavy rains and surging rivers have hit Serbia and Bosnia & Herzegovina.
Around 700 houses were flooded in western and central Serbia, according to state RTS television.
Rivers have also burst their banks and there are increasing concerns over the possibility of landslides.
A landslide in neighbouring Bosnia cut a key road connecting Tuzla and the capital Sarajevo.
Floods also have hit a western area in Bosnia, damaging roads, bridges and houses in the Balkan country.
Both Serbia and Bosnia were hit by major flooding in 2014.

A man takes pictures of a swarm of locusts in Allahabad, India, on June 11, 2020.
This year, Kenya had its worst infestation in 70 years, and India, Ethiopia, and Somalia had the worst infestations they've had in 25 years.
The reason for the outbreaks, according to The New York Times, is climate change, which has caused warmer weather and more rain — ideal conditions for locusts to thrive.
Alongs with the weather, poor monitoring due to armed conflicts — especially in war-torn Yemen, where the current outbreak began — and a lack of resources caused by the coronavirus pandemic, has led to locusts swelling in numbers that haven't been reported in decades.
Without more intervention, locusts could cause millions of people in 23 countries to go hungry by December, according to NBC News.

A massive plume of Saharan dust has shrouded swathes of the Caribbean, turning blue skies into a milky-brown haze and sparking health warnings across the region as air quality fell to unhealthy levels.
A vast cloud of Sahara dust is blanketing the Caribbean as it heads to the U.S. with a size and concentration that experts say hasn´t been seen in half a century.
Air quality across most of the region fell to record "hazardous" levels and experts who nicknamed the event the "Godzilla dust cloud" warned people to stay indoors and use air filters if they have one.
"This is the most significant event in the past 50 years," said Pablo Méndez Lázaro, an environmental health specialist with the University of Puerto Rico. "Conditions are dangerous in many Caribbean islands."
Many health specialists were concerned about those battling respiratory symptoms tied to COVID-19. Lázaro, who is working with NASA to develop an alert system for the arrival of Sahara dust, said the concentration was so high in recent days that it could even have adverse effects on healthy people.
The epicenter was located 50.8 km (31.6 miles) NNE of Siglufjörður (population 1 190) and 101.4 km (63 miles) N of Akureyri (population 17693).
There are about 13 000 people living within 100 km (62 miles).
35 000 people are estimated to have felt light shaking.
In a Facebook post, water agency PUB said the floods were reported at Jurong Town Hall Road, the junction of Bedok North Avenue 4 and Upper Changi Road, as well as New Upper Changi Road.
Opera Estate, an area with low-lying service roads within private residential estates, was also affected.
According to PUB, the first flash flood was reported at 8.30am and the agency's quick response team was immediately deployed to all sites. Flash floods at all locations had subsided by 9.20am and the cause of the flooding is under investigation.













Comment: The US Tsunami Warning Center has issued a warning for the potential threat of tsunami waves for the Pacific coasts of Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.
Footage and more details from Twitter:
UPDATE:The Guardian on June 24 reports: