A 5.5-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Rimini, Italy, has been felt throughout central Italy and parts of the Balkans.
Houses on the Adriatic coast shook for several seconds, and there were reports of minor damage but no casualties.
Schools were closed in parts of the central Marche region, and trains were halted near Ancona due to suspected track damage.
According to Italian officials, the quake was 8 kilometers (5 miles) deep.
The first and strongest tremor at 07:07 (06:07 GMT) was followed by a number of smaller shocks.

Fallen masonry was seen in the centre of Ancona and at the station, and residents rushed into the streets in panic. Italian reports said trains were suspended on several lines including between Ancona and the capital, Rome.
A resident in Fano, a coastal town between Rimini and Ancona, told Ansa news agency that the streetlights began swaying like twigs: “Everything was shaking violently, a dreadful feeling, and people poured into the street.”
Local Fano TV presenter Massimo Foghetti was doing a press review when the studio began to shake.
#Terremoto in diretta durante la rassegna stampa dell’emittente Fano Tv 19. Massimo Foghetti cerca di capire, poi arriva un’altra scossa e fugge. La trasmissione viene interrotta pic.twitter.com/ZkyACR6T5E
— Rai Radio1 (@Radio1Rai) November 9, 2022

Despite the widespread alarm, the fire brigade said it had not received any rescue requests.
Central Italy is one of Europe’s most active earthquake regions. A 6.2-magnitude earthquake in 2016 killed 299 people, most of them in the picturesque mountain village of Amatrice.