USGS: No earthquake in New England, despite multiple reports
The agency received more than 100 reports of an earthquake from north of Boston to the coast of Rhode Island.
BOSTON (AP) — Hundreds of people in eastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island took to social media on Friday to report feeling an earthquake, but the U.S. Geological Survey said what they felt was definitely not a temblor.
“Felt it on Martha’s Vineyard! A rumbling, then a jolt. A second rumbling a few mins later,” Whitney Dailey posted on Twitter.
The agency received more than 100 reports of an earthquake from north of Boston to the coast of Rhode Island, but an earthquake felt over such a large geographic area would have been of a magnitude strong enough to be detected by the USGS, geophysicist Robert Sanders said.
Nothing was detected.
We have heard reports of people feeling shaking or hearing a “boom” type noise in parts of Southeast MA this AM. We are not aware of any damage & have been in contact with the @USGS which reports no seismic activity/earthquake. We continue to monitor for any potential impacts. https://t.co/4xCFWzq0Zf
— MEMA (@MassEMA) April 2, 2021
What people felt was likely either a sonic boom, perhaps caused by an aircraft, or some other “atmospheric event,” he said. He would not hazard a guess.
Earthquakes are not unusual in New England, but are usually relatively weak and cause little to no damage.
A 3.6 magnitude earthquake centered in Buzzards Bay in November was the strongest in southern New England in decades.
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