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Rare Earthquake Hits Virginia, Rattles U.S. East Coast

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Rare Earthquake Hits Virginia, Rattles U.S. East Coast
Tremors felt in Washington, D.C., New York City.
Crowds of evacuated workers in Manhattan are seen after an earthquake.

virginia-earthquake-strikes-east-coast_39482_600x450.jpg


Evacuees crowd Manhattan streets after a magnitude 5.8 earthquake shook the U.S. East Coast.

Published August 23, 2011

The magnitude 5.8 earthquake that struck Virginia Tuesday was a rare but significant
event for the region, according to one quake expert.
"It was quite sizable," said seismologist Hua-wei Zhou of Texas Tech University.
The Virginia earthquake struck at about 1:51 p.m ET near Mineral, Virgina, about 40 miles
(64 kilometers) northwest of Richmond (map). The tremors shook buildings and prompted
evacuations as far away as Washington, D.C., and New York City.
The quake was followed by a magnitude 2.8 aftershock 45 minutes later.
(Related: "Japan Earthquake Vibrations Nearly Reached Space.")
Earthquakes rarely strike the U.S. East Coast and are generally less severe when they do.
Before this latest quake, for example, the largest earthquake on record in central Virginia
was a magnitude 4.8 temblor that occurred in 1875, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
Eastern Earthquakes Smaller But Farther Reaching
Earthquakes are rare in the eastern U.S. because the region is farther from a plate boundary
—a region where tectonic plates meet and grind together. The closest such boundary is
several hundred miles away in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean and in the Caribbean Sea.
By contrast, California has a major fault line, the San Andreas fault, running vertically
through most of the state, Zhou explained.

(See "Mexico Earthquake Zone Linked to California Faults.")
Plate boundaries are especially prone to earthquakes because the motion of tectonic plates
creates tension that can cause significant shaking when the stress gets released.
Zhou said he suspects the Virginia earthquake was due to the much less frequent
release of stress from a small thrust fault in the region. Still, earthquakes in the central and
eastern U.S. are typically felt over a much broader region than on the West Coast.
"A magnitude 5.5 eastern U.S. earthquake usually can be felt as far as 500 kilometers
[300 miles] from where it occurred, and sometimes causes damage as far away as
40 kilometers [25 miles]," according to the USGS. Being far from plate boundaries,
the older and denser continental crust is much more like a solid sheet of bedrock than
the fault-filled crust on the West Coast, allowing seismic waves to travel farther.
"Most bedrock beneath central Virginia was assembled as continents collided to form
a supercontinent about 500 to 300 million years ago, raising the
Appalachian Mountains," the USGS says.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/...oday-washington-dc-richmond-virginia-science/
 
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