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2011 Virginia earthquake

Coordinates: 37°52′30″N 77°54′29″W / 37.875°N 77.908°W / 37.875; -77.908
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2011 Virginia earthquake
2011 Virginia earthquake is located in the United States
2011 Virginia earthquake
UTC time??
Magnitude5.9
Depth6.0 km (3.7 mi)[1]
Epicenter37°52′30″N 77°54′29″W / 37.875°N 77.908°W / 37.875; -77.908
TypeEarthquake
Areas affected United States
Max. intensityMM
TsunamiNo
Casualties0

The 2011 Virginia earthquake was a magnitude 5.9 (Mw) intraplate earthquake that occurred on August 23, 2011. The focus is reported by the USGS to be about 64 km (39 mi) northwest of Richmond, Virginia near the town of Mineral, Virginia. [2][1]

The earthquake was the highest-magnitude event in Virginia in recorded history.[3]

Impact

At approximately 2:12 PM EST, tremors were felt as far away as Ontario, Canada, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Massachusetts. In Washington, DC the Capitol building and the Pentagon were evacuated, as were many buildings in New York City.[4][5][2]"5.9 earthquake hits Virginia, rattles NYC, east coast". ABC News. 23 August 2011. Retrieved 23 August 2011.</ref>

Damage

There are reports the Pentagon, The National Cathdedral and the Regean International airport have been damaged.

References

See also