A wounded person is tended to at Hotel Villa Creole in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2010. The strongest earthquake in more than 200 years rocked Haiti, collapsing a hospital where people screamed for help and heavily damaging the National Palace, U.N. peacekeeper headquarters and other buildings.
Edeline B. Clermont weeps in the "Little Haiti" area of Miami as she talks to her sister in Boston after both were unable to contact relatives in Haiti after hearing news about the quake.
An injured child is tended to at the Hotel Villa Creole in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Elie Isaac, left, and Caleb Roseme, both of Norwich, Conn., pray and for the people of the Caribbean Islands, at the First Haitian Baptist Church of Norwich.
A destroyed building near the Hotel Villa Creole in Port-au-Prince.
People walk past a crushed car and other rubble in Port-au-Prince.
The injured are tended to at Hotel Villa Creole in Port-au-Prince.
A man carries an injured child outside Hotel Villa Creole in Port-au-Prince.
This image released by the U.S. Geological Survey shows a quake map of the Haiti Region.
Dr. Paige Morgan, seismologist at the California Institute of Technology, shows a map of Haiti's earthquake epicenter and population density.