The earthquake was strong enough to destroy Port-au-Prince, and leveled all the buildings between
Lake Miragoâne and
Petit-Goâve, to the west of Port-au-Prince. The
Plain of the Cul-de-Sac, a
rift valley under Port-au-Prince that extends eastwards into the
Dominican Republic, experienced extensive
soil liquefaction. The ground under Port-au-Prince liquefied, throwing down all its buildings, including those that had survived the 1751 earthquake. Strong shocks were felt in
Cap-Haïtien, about away from the estimated epicenter in the
Léogâne Arrondissement. Some chimneys on the distant island of
Jamaica collapsed. It is estimated that 200 people died in Port-au-Prince in collapsed buildings, including 79 of the 80 people in Port-au-Prince's hospital. The death toll would have been higher, but the earthquake was preceded by a rumbling noise that gave people time to flee their houses before the main tremor, which consisted of two shocks lasting a total of four minutes. Fifty people died in Léogâne. ==Tsunami==