April 26, 2015: Security videos from a house and a hotel in Kathmandu show the violent 7.9 magnitude quake that struck Nepal on Saturday. <br />Chloe Ross <br /> <br />Chloe Ross <br />Share on Facebook <br />199 <br />Share on Twitter <br />46 <br />Share on Share <br />245 <br /> <br /> <br />Security cameras have captured the sheer force of the magnitude-7.9 earthquake in Nepal which has claimed more than 1800 lives. <br /> <br />Kishor Rana shared footage of the moment the quake rocked his Kathmandu guest house yesterday, flattening historic temples in nearby Darbar Square and sending an avalanche racing down Mount Everest. <br /> <br />Pet dogs are first to react to the tremor as it quickly builds in strength. <br /> <br />Walls and trees can be seen jolting as heavy pot plants are thrown from a balcony level and panicked guests run below. <br /> <br />READ MORE: 66 Aussies still missing in Nepal as death toll climbs above 1800 <br /> <br />READ MORE: Actor High Sheridan's brother among Aussies missing in Nepal <br /> <br />April 25, 2015: Vision has emerged from Nepal reportedly of the aftermath left behind by a major earthquake. <br />Hundreds of people are believed to have been inside Kathmandu's Darbar Square temples at the moment they were reduced to rubble. (AAP) <br /> <br />Hundreds of people are believed to have been inside Kathmandu's Darbar Square temples at the moment they were reduced to rubble. (AAP) <br /> <br />In another clip shared by Jatinder Vohra from hotel CCTV in Nepal, the camera shakes so violently that the image is blurred. <br /> <br />The quake levelled buildings in the centuries-old section of the Nepalese capital, including the landmark nine-story Dharahara Tower, with shocks felt as far away as the Pakistani city of Lahore and in New Delhi, India. <br /> <br />As many as 250 are believed to have been inside Dharahara at the moment it was reduced to rubble. <br /> <br />Images of the aftermath posted to social media show the extent of the destruction as people dig through the rubble of collapsed buildings and search for survivors. <br /> <br />Indian tourist Devyani Pant was in a Kathmandu coffee shop with friends when "suddenly the tables started trembling and paintings on the wall fell on the ground". <br /> <br />"I screamed and rushed outside," she told Reuters by telephone from the capital. <br />People dig through the rubble of collapsed buildings and search for survivors. (AAP) <br /> <br />People dig through the rubble of collapsed buildings and search for survivors. (AAP) <br />An avalanche swept through Mt Everest base camp, with fears dozens may be buried under heavy snow. (AAP) <br /> <br />An avalanche swept through Mt Everest base camp, with fears dozens may be buried under heavy snow. (AAP) <br /> <br />"We are now collecting bodies and rushing the injured to the ambulance. <br /> <br />"We are being forced to pile several bodies one above the other to fit them in." <br /> <br />A local resident who lives near the epicenter of the quake between Kathmandu and Pokhara described the aftermath to the AP. <br /> <br />"Our village has been almost wiped out. Most of the houses are either buried by landslide or damaged by shaking," said Vim Tamang. <br /> <br />"All the villagers have gathered in the open area. We don't know what to do. We are feeling helpless." <br /> <br />Hospitals are quickly filling with scores of injured people, with thousands preparing to sleep outside in makeshift tents.