MSNBC.com
WEST SALEM, Ill. - Residents in the Chicago
area felt at least one aftershock Friday, hours after a 5.2 magnitude
earthquake rattled skyscrapers in Chicago's Loop and homes in
Cincinnati. No major injuries or damage were reported.
The follow-up tremor registered at 4.5 on the Richter Scale, according
to the U.S. Geological Survey. At last three other aftershocks were
measured at 2.5, 2.5, and 2.6, the National Earthquake Center reported.
At least 21 states felt the initial quake just before 4:37 a.m.,
centered six miles from West Salem, Ill., and 66 miles from Evansville,
Ind.
"It shook our house where it woke me up," said
David Behm of Philo, 10 miles south of Champaign. "Windows were
rattling, and you could hear it. The house was shaking inches. For
people in central Illinois, this is a big deal. It's not like
California."
Bonnie Lucas, a morning co-host at WHO-AM in Des Moines, said she was
sitting in her office when she felt her chair move. She grabbed her
desk, and then heard the ceiling panels start to creak. The shaking
lasted about 5 seconds, she said.
The quake was believed to have involved the Wabash fault, a northern
extension of the New Madrid fault about 6 miles north of Mt. Carmel,
Ill., said the geological survey's geophysicist Randy Baldwin.
The last earthquake in the region to approach the severity of Friday's
temblor was a 5.0 magnitude quake that shook a nearby area in 2002,
Baldwin said.
"This is a fairly large quake for this
region," he said. "They might occur every few years."
Baldwin said the USGS revised the quake's magnitude from 5.4 to 5.2.
Irvetta McMurtry of Cincinnati said she felt
the rattling for up to 20 seconds.
"All of a sudden, I was awakened by this
rumbling shaking," said McMurtry, 43. "My bed is an older wood frame
bed, so the bed started to creak and shake, and it was almost like
somebody was taking my mattress and moving it back and forth."
Lucas Griswold, a dispatcher in West Salem, said the Edwards County
sheriff's department received reports of minor damage and no injuries.
"Oh, yeah, I felt it. It was interesting," Griswold said. "A lot of
shaking."
Indiana State Police spokesman Sgt. Todd Ringle in Evansville said
there were no immediate reports of damage.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24195650/from/ET/