Community Corner
Can a Large Earthquake Hit Massachusetts?
With the Connecticut earthquakes shaking up Massachusetts, Patch set out to see why the earth quakes and how bad it can get in New England.
When you see the word βearthquake,β youβre most likely thinking βCalifornia.β At least you probably would have before this past Monday when a tremor in Connecticut was felt across New England, including parts of Massachusetts.
That earthquake, which measured at a 3.3 magnitude, set off more than a dozen others between Connecticut and Rhode Island in what seismologists call a βswarm.β
The latest quake struck in Plainfield, CT on Thursday morning, Jan. 15, around 4:39 a.m., according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
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Plainfield Police have received more than 300 calls about the earthquakes this week, according to The Boston Globe. There seems to be a simple explanation for all those calls: people arenβt used to earthquakes and therefore arenβt sure what to do.
But despite New Englandβs βthat doesnβt happen hereβ understanding of earthquakes in the region, the earth tremors here more often than youβd think.
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Data taken from seismometers that Boston Collegeβs Weston Observatory staff set up throughout New England show earthquakes happen almost every day, we just usually donβt feel them.
Earthquakes too small for humans to notice are called microseisms, according to The New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services, and are thought to be a byproduct of human interference such as drilling for gas and mining.
Larger tremors, anything with a 3.0 magnitude or higher, are what we typically feel and refer to as βearthquakes.β These tremors happen most often when stress builds up on a fault line, a fracture in the Earthβs crust, and is then released. This causes rocks on either side of the fault to slip past each other and sends a wave of energy throughout the ground.
According to the USGS, βthe magnitude of an earthquake is related to the length of the fault on which it occurs -- the longer the fault, the larger the earthquake.β
New England sits on a spiderweb of faults, according to the USGS. But faults in Massachusetts are small compared to those in western states like California, meaning the likelihood of a devastating quake is slim. The stateβs biggest recorded earthquake happened more than 250 years ago, off the coast of Cape Ann in 1755.
That earthquake measured in at a 6.2 magnitude and caused chimneys in the area to crumble, according to a newspaper of the time. But John Ebel, senior research scientist at the Weston Observatory, doesnβt expect to see anything close to that magnitude during the current swarm.
βThere is less than a 1 percent chance of getting anything larger than the 3.3-magnitude quake,β Ebel told The Boston Globe.
In other words, you shouldnβt worry that Massachusetts will be hit with an earthquake so big that the earth opens up and swallows you whole. The USGS disproves that myth with two simple sentences.
βIf the fault could open, there would be no friction. Without friction, there would be no earthquake.β
Image via Wikimedia: Damage caused by a magnitude 7.5 earthquake in Guatemala in 1976.
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