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East Coast Earthquake Strongest Since 1944

BOB LEWIS   08/23/11 11:27 PM ET   AP

MINERAL, Va. — Tens of millions of people from Georgia to Canada were jolted Tuesday by the strongest earthquake to strike the East Coast since World War II. Three weeks before the 10th anniversary of Sept. 11, office workers poured out of New York skyscrapers and the Pentagon, relieved it was nothing more sinister than an act of nature.

There were no known deaths or serious injuries, but cracks appeared in the Washington Monument and the National Cathedral, which had three capstones break off its tower. Windows shattered and grocery stores were wrecked in Virginia, where the quake was centered. The White House and Capitol were evacuated.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake registered magnitude 5.8. By West Coast standards, that is mild. But the East Coast is not accustomed to earthquakes at all, and this one unsettled some of the nation's biggest population centers.

In New York and Washington, people said their thoughts were of an explosion or terrorist attack. In some cases, workers in Washington mentioned the tremors in phone calls to colleagues in New York, and seconds later, the shaking reached there, too.

"We thought it was a bomb at first because everyone has 9/11 on the brain and that it's so close to September and the 10th anniversary," said Cathy McDonald, who works in an IRS office in downtown Washington.

Hundreds of people spilled out of the federal courthouse blocks from ground zero after the quake struck just before 2 p.m. EDT. Workers in the Empire State Building rushed into the streets, some having descended dozens of flights of stairs.

"I thought we'd been hit by an airplane," said one worker, Marty Wiesner.

Adrian Ollivierre, an accountant who was in his office on the 60th floor when the shaking began, said: "I thought I was having maybe a heart attack, and I saw everybody running. I think what it is, is the paranoia that happens from 9/11, and that's why I'm still out here – because, I'm sorry, I'm not playing with my life."

The quake was felt as far north as Toronto, as far west as Indiana and Kentucky and as far south as Atlanta and Savannah, Ga. It was also felt on Martha's Vineyard off Massachusetts, where President Barack Obama, who is vacationing there, was getting ready to tee off in a round of golf.

The White House said there were no reports of major damage to the nation's infrastructure, including airports and nuclear facilities. Two nuclear reactors at the North Anna Power Station in Virginia were automatically taken off line by safety systems, said Roger Hannah, a spokesman for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The plant is in the same county as the quake's epicenter, about 80 miles southwest of Washington and 40 miles northwest of Richmond, Va.

The Park Service closed all monuments and memorials on the National Mall, and ceiling tiles fell at Reagan National Airport outside Washington. Many nonessential workers in Washington were sent home for the day. The Capitol was reopened by late afternoon for people to retrieve their things.

At the Pentagon, a low rumbling built until the building itself was shaking, and people ran into the corridors of the complex. The shaking continued, to shouts of "Evacuate! Evacuate!" The main damage to the building, the largest single workspace for the federal government, came from a broken water pipe.

The National Cathedral said it had sustained "significant damage," with three capstones, each shaped like a fleur-de-lis, breaking off the main tower. Cracks appeared in the flying buttresses around the apse at the cathedral's east end, the oldest part of the building.

"Everyone here is safe," the cathedral said on its official Twitter feed. "Please pray for the Cathedral as there has been some damage."

Around Mineral, Va., a small town close to the epicenter, people milled around in their lawns, on sidewalks and parking lots, still rattled and leery of re-entering buildings. All over town, masonry was crumpled, and there were stores with shelf contents strewn on the floor. Several display windows at businesses in the tiny heart of downtown were broken and lay in jagged shards.

Carmen Bonano, who has a 1-year-old granddaughter, sat on the porch of her family's white-frame house, its twin brick chimneys destroyed. Her voice still quavered with fear.

"The fridge came down off the wall and things started falling. I just pushed the refrigerator out of the way, grabbed the baby and ran," she said.

By the standards of the West Coast, where earthquakes are much more common, the Virginia quake was not strong. Since 1900, there have been 50 quakes of magnitude 5.8 or greater in California alone. Quakes in the East tend to be felt across a much broader area.

"The waves are able to reverberate and travel pretty happily out for miles," said USGS seismologist Susan Hough.

The Geological Survey put the quake in its yellow alert category, meaning there was potential for local damage but relatively little economic damage.

The agency said the quake was 3.7 miles beneath the surface, but scientists said they may never be able to map the exact fault. Aftershocks may help to outline it, said Rowena Lohman, a seismologist at Cornell University. There have been a few aftershocks. Two were magnitudes 2.2 and 2.8 but a later one measured 4.8.

The last quake of equal power to strike the East Coast was in New York in 1944. The largest East Coast quake on record was a 7.3 that hit South Carolina in 1886. In 1897, a magnitude-5.9 quake was recorded at Giles County, Va., the largest on record in that state.

A 5.8-magnitude quake releases as much energy as almost eight kilotons of TNT, about half the power of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan. The earthquake that devastated Japan earlier this year released more than 60,000 times as much energy as Tuesday's.

The Virginia quake came a day after an earthquake in Colorado toppled groceries off shelves and caused minor damage to homes in the southern part of the state and in northern New Mexico. No injuries were reported as aftershocks continued Tuesday.

For the most part, the East Coast quake was a curiosity, at least after the initial fear faded away. It disrupted what was, for millions of people, an ordinary workday.

In New York, the police commissioner, Raymond Kelly, was in a meeting with top deputies planning security for the upcoming anniversary when the shaking started. The district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance, was starting a news conference about the dismissal of the sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former head of the International Monetary Fund. Reporters and aides began rushing out the door until it became clear it was subsiding.

On Wall Street, the floor of the New York Stock Exchange did not shake, officials said, but the Dow Jones industrial average sank 60 points soon after the quake struck. The Dow began rising again a half-hour later and finished the day up 322 points.

Amtrak said its trains along the Northeast Corridor between Baltimore and Washington were at reduced speeds and crews were inspecting stations and railroad infrastructure before returning to normal.

In Charleston, W.Va., hundreds of workers left the state Capitol building and employees at other downtown office buildings were asked to leave temporarily.

"The whole building shook," said Jennifer Bundy, a spokeswoman for the state Supreme Court. "You could feel two different shakes. Everybody just kind of came out on their own."

In Ohio, office buildings swayed in Columbus and Cincinnati. The press box at Progressive Field, home of the Cleveland Indians, shook, as did the stadium at the consolation game of the Little League World Series in South Williamsport, Pa.

John Gurlach, air traffic controller at the Morgantown Municipal Airport in West Virginia, was in a 40-foot-tall tower when the earth trembled.

"There were two of us looking at each other saying, `What's that?'" he said, even as a commuter plane was landing. "It was noticeably shaking. It felt like a B-52 unloading."

Immediately, the phone rang from the nearest airport in Clarksburg, and a computer began spitting out green strips of paper – alerts from other airports in New York and Washington issuing ground stops "due to earthquake."

The earthquake caused a stir online, where people posted to Facebook and Twitter within seconds and described what they had felt. The keywords in posts, or hashtags, included "DCquake," "VAquake" and "Columbusquake," an indication of how broadly the quake was experienced.

Quake photos and videos also made the rounds. A handful were authentic. Many more were not – they were favorite earthquake scenes from Hollywood blockbusters or footage of people shaking their glasses and plates at an Olive Garden.

On the West Coast, where the last major quake to strike a metro area was a magnitude-6.7 event that ravaged greater Los Angeles in 1994, what happened back East was cause for outright mockery.

"Californians yawn, shrug and go back to their iced lattes," Marcus Beer, who reviews video games for a local news broadcaster, said in a Twitter post.

___

The following Associated Press writers contributed to this report: Larry Neumeister, Tom Hays, Adam Geller and Eric Carvin in New York; Lolita C. Baldor and Seth Borenstein in Washington; Alicia Chang in Los Angeles; Ray Henry in Atlanta; Tom Withers in Cleveland; JoAnne Viviano in Columbus, Ohio; and Vicki Smith in Morgantown, W.Va.

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MINERAL, Va. — Tens of millions of people from Georgia to Canada were jolted Tuesday by the strongest earthquake to strike the East Coast since World War II. Three weeks before the 10th annivers...
MINERAL, Va. — Tens of millions of people from Georgia to Canada were jolted Tuesday by the strongest earthquake to strike the East Coast since World War II. Three weeks before the 10th annivers...
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02:18 PM on 08/25/2011
Out here on the left coast, we had some fun at the expense of you right coast earthquake novices. However, we do empathize with the trauma of having "terra firma" move unexpectedly under you and having your house or business trashed.

It was upsetting to see so many people putting themselves in danger by running outside, where falling objects can injure or kill. The rarity of earthquakes in your neighborhood does not excuse you from educating yourselves about how to act in one.
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Jenna Bean
Stop Child Abuse!
02:35 AM on 08/25/2011
Thursday August 25 2011, 05:07:50 UTC 79 minutes ago Virginia 4.5 5.0

I knew I felt my bed vibrating earlier, lasted for about 20 seconds maybe.
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Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
12:17 AM on 08/25/2011
The worst part of this quake is that those Westboro church freaks MAY come to the affected areas and spread their message of hate.
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StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
11:56 PM on 08/24/2011
The jokes get old. MAny people repeat them ad infinitum. Boooorrrriinnnng
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temmaleah
09:40 PM on 08/24/2011
not knowing much about earthquakes i always thought that you would have like "mini quakes" first before you get a major/minor like this 5.8 in a region not known for it so could THIS be the "precursor event" ?and if so, could the difference in less damage (seeing as it was so shallow) be the difference in dirt and rock? anyways my heart goes out to those affected by it.
brw1970
Repeal the 16th Amendment!
06:05 PM on 08/24/2011
More Breaking news: Obama interrupts his Martha's Vineyard golfing to announce that the Washington DC earthquake occurred on an obscure fault line that runs under the White House and is known as "Bush's Fault."
08:12 PM on 08/24/2011
Like everything else that goes wrong under the Obama era.
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Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
12:13 AM on 08/25/2011
LOL! Good one.
03:09 PM on 08/24/2011
I grew up in California , I dont envy the people on the east coast having to go through a earthquake
I do feel for them , I have many friends that have PTSD from 9-11 Many lost friends in 9-11 I can see why they would think terrosoist attack with all of the up heval in the middle east going on too

Where I live now there hasnt been any activity since 1811 when the earth shook so violently it changed the direction of the flow on the Mississippi river allowing for a lake to be formed in Tennesse . I didn't feel yesterdays quake . I can understand their fear of them being shaken out of bed many times growing up . The "89" quake I was in Los Gatos ca 9 mo pregnant when that one rolled through ..Wasn't fun that stubborn child of mine didn't want to be born till the fallowing week
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Nelle
bah-weep-grahna-weep-ninny-bon
02:31 PM on 08/24/2011
My first and hopefully last earthquake!!!
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Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
12:19 AM on 08/25/2011
Good luck with that. There have been many relatively minor quakes in places that seldom experience earthquakes this year. It seems the earthquake problem is spreading.
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wilkesgm
02:28 PM on 08/24/2011
No injuries. Several people were killed in completely unconnected car accidents. Several others were shot at in DC - some hit. Big deal. What a bunch of babies. No sense of proportion in life - and that is the problem with the East Coast in general. Gee, there is a 4 inch crack in one of the marble covering stones on the Washinton Monument. So fix it and get on with the day.
02:27 PM on 08/24/2011
If you didn't know it was an earthquake you'd think one of those flash mobs went through the place.
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excaderesdesire
I have spread my dreams beneath your feet...
02:27 PM on 08/24/2011
Mother Nature is raring her head at all of us across the world. Her anger sure has been felt this year that is for sure. They keep saying the west coast is due for a big one. However considering all the coal mines out there on the east coast one wonders if that next big one wont be the east coast instead of the west.
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praymondc
praymondc
02:05 PM on 08/24/2011
Mother nature has spoken: "Hey people I'm still in charge here and everywhere!" "Keep screwing around with my climate and I'll choke and drown the lot of you!"..... It's time we listen to Mother Nature.
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wilkesgm
02:37 PM on 08/24/2011
There was an ice age 11,000 years ago that was followe by global warming - BEFORE any human industry was present. The Earth started cooling again in 2003 as part of a normal cycle unrelated to humans. That is why they don't say "global warming" anymore, but now it's climate change. So if cutting back fossil fuel use to decrease temperature is a good thing, now that the Earth is cooling, they would suggest dramatically increasing carbon emmissions. Right? Nope. Nobody on the green side is talking about more carbon emissions to keep the climate at the same temperature. Ergo - they are liars and frauds who benefit financially and professionally from scaring people and claiming they have the key to stop a global catyclism. As for "Mother Nature", there is no such creature. There is only a huge system that exists on this monsterous collection of molecules called Earth. There is no rhyme or reason to it. Meaning, if we dig a tunnel, the Earth does not cry out in pain. The Earth does far more damage to itself that we ever had. Every heard of the Grand Canyon? How about the Elgeyo escarpment in Africa. Your "mother nature" doesn't exist - of it she does, she hates all life. Just think of all the woodland creatures that were blinded, crushed and burned at Mt. St. Helens. What, exactly, did Bambi do to piss off Mother Nature to the point of being brutally killed? Hmmmmmm?
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wrascil
01:56 PM on 08/24/2011
OH come on now al bore predicted this, it was caused because of all that C02 and B.S. emissions by dum'0'crats in Washington... 0'Bomber is on the campaign trail, a big blow is coming
10:25 PM on 08/25/2011
If I read your comment correctly, it sounds like you need help badly,
You need to recognize a sense of REALITY. You maybe living
under a sense of not being to accept things as they are.
I will pray for you. Everybody needs help at some point in life. I
know I did and am a better person for doing it.
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Danny Terry
01:53 PM on 08/24/2011
More quakes coming so move back to to the country
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AddisonGast1
Good news from D.C--Congress deadlocked --Will Rog
01:48 PM on 08/24/2011
From the videos we see, this one was a "jolter" as we know them in CA. The real shake rattle and roll comes from a "mover and shaker" that will last for sometimes over a minute--THOSE are real "E" ticket ride types. These esterners do have to learn not to run to the streets and stand in front of the buildings when these happen. Glass, panels, awnings, all sorts of things peal off a building and fall onto the ....(right where they were watching and using their cells) SIDEWALK!!. Ya'all take now..hear?
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excaderesdesire
I have spread my dreams beneath your feet...
02:20 PM on 08/24/2011
Yeah I guess that is a perfect example of people who do not get quakes very often, however you are right what is the point in running outside in front of a skyscraper on the sidewalk. You're safer in the skyscraper than standing on the sidewalk waiting for a pane of glass to fall just ain't to smart people.Wheres all that common sense people...wow
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4thefree
03:03 PM on 08/24/2011
The problem is that Northeasterners still have 9/11 on theiir minds; many of them having witnessed the Twin Towers coming down with the people trapped inside. No one was thinking "Earthquake" when they scurried out into the streets, I can assure you.
04:50 PM on 08/24/2011
Your post hits the nail on the head... absolutely right. Instead of those "mocking" us in the east (I'm getting so SICK of reading that), realize that the fear came from not understanding what was happening. We're much more adept at dealing with Hurricanes- something that the westerners aren't as used to- and we wouldn't mock them if a Hurricane headed their way.
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AddisonGast1
Good news from D.C--Congress deadlocked --Will Rog
09:39 PM on 08/24/2011
Good point 4thefree. If I heard a boom or heard an explosion, I'd bet out of the building--you could find me by the brown trail out the door. Really.