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Re: Just had a small earthquake
Earthquake of 5.0 shakes Ontario and Quebec
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1 hour, 55 minutes ago
By James Mccarten, The Canadian Press
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TORONTO - Paintings fell from the walls, coffee sloshed out of cups and bewildered central Canadians wondered what in the world was going on Wednesday as a "moderate" earthquake rattled residents across a wide swath of Ontario, Quebec and the northeastern United States.
The U.S. Geological Survey initially described the event '” an extremely rare phenomenon so far east of the Rocky Mountains '” as a magnitude 5.5 temblor that occurred at 1:41 p.m. ET and was centred about 60 kilometres north of Ottawa, in western Quebec.
The magnitude was later downgraded to a 5.0 quake with an epicentre about 18 kilometres underground. Residents across a wide swath of the eastern United States, including New York, Vermont, Michigan and Illinois, also reported feeling the ground shake.
Within minutes of the quake, the Internet came alive with people saying they felt the earth rumble in cities across Ontario and Quebec, including Windsor, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal.
For about 30 seconds, the tremors shook downtown buildings, homes in west-end Ottawa and government offices across the Ottawa River in Gatineau, Que.
Nova Scotia Liberal MP Roger Cuzner, who was in his Parliament Hill office when the quake struck, was cleaning up some constituency business when "the coffee in my cup started slopping around."
"You could feel the impact," Cuzner marvelled.
In Parliament's halls of power, quizzical staffers poked their heads out of offices and stared around dumbfounded in the moments before Commons security ordered everyone out in what Cuzner described as a brisk and orderly evacuation.
Everyone filed down the stairs and out into the driveway and after a few moments guard shephered startled staffers and tongue-tied tourists back from the building an on to the front lawn, which was strewn with staging for next week's Canada Day festivities.
It was a frightening experience for anyone in one of the political district, where some were fearful about the structural integrity of the area's old historic buildings.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper was on his way to the airport and did not feel the earthquake, a spokesman said. Outside his office, a picture fell to the ground.
Mike Charlebois, who works in the parliamentary dining room, was on the sixth floor of the centrepiece building known as Parliament's Centre Block when the shaking started.
"We were scared because we thought the building was going to fall apart," Charlebois said.
"First thing we did was evacuate the building because we had no idea what was going on. The Parliament is very delicate; it could have been a bomb threat or anything so we had no idea what it could have been."
"It was pretty scary because you have no idea what can happen, what it was that made that kind of shakiness. We hear so much about terrorists, stuff like that, it's (in the back of) our mind."
Melanie Lauzon, a Liberal staffer, was among those startled political staffers commingling with tongue-tied tourists on Parliament's front lawn, which was strewn with staging for next week's Canada Day festivities.
"The building is so old, and the crack and the sound '” it was bizarre," Lauzon said. "And very, very long."
Coming on the eve of the G8/G20 summits in Toronto, Lauzon said her first thought was that Ottawa had been hit with "with a very large car bomb."
Witnesses in downtown Toronto also described feeling a prolonged tremor that shook desks, rattled bookshelves and caused paintings on walls to shake.
Holly Rockbrune, 25, works for an insurance company. She was home for lunch when she began to notice something strange was happening.
"It was odd because I was in the kitchen making lunch and I could hear banging," Rockbrune said.
"I went into the living room and everything was rattling, but I didn't think much of it so I went back into the kitchen. It only lasted a few seconds."
A four-hour drive north, in the city of North Bay, Ont., Mayor Vic Fedeli was standing outside his office when he suddenly felt his legs wobble.
"I came back into my office and all my paintings are askew," he said. "You really didn'™t hear anything, but the entire seven-storey building shook."
The city's switchboard "is lit up like a Christmas tree, with some people reporting sewer and water breakages," Fedeli added.
Stephen Taylor, a political pundit in Ottawa, used his Twitter feed to describe what the tremors felt like.
"I was in an elevator when the earthquake hit," Taylor wrote. "Debris hitting the top of it, walls scraping ... fun stuff."
An analyst with the survey said it's typical for a quake of that magnitude to be felt more widely across the Eastern seaboard because of the geological conditions there, which include the massive underground rock shelf known as the Canadian Shield.
"The shield there, the structure of the crust is more rigid and so the waves carry better," he said.
There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.
It was one of the most significant quakes ever measured in the region, according to the organization.
The two largest quakes in western Quebec occurred in 1935 at magnitude 6.1 and in 1732 at a magnitude of 6.2, according to the agency.
It said earthquakes east of the Rocky Mountains, although less frequent than in the west, are typically felt over a much broader region.
The survey also said that east of the Rockies, an earthquake can be felt over an area as much as ten times larger than a similar magnitude earthquake on the west coast.
Hundreds of people were milling about on downtown Ottawa streets as the Parliament buildings emptied, although the Prime Minister's Office across the street at the Langevin Block was among the few that was not evacuated.
A sitting of the Senate was disturbed, as were preparations by the PMO for this week's G8 and G20 summits. PMO staff were forced out onto Wellington Street.
Conservative Senator Lowell Murray said the massive chandeliers of the upper chamber began swaying during a mundane debate on energy issues.
"Initally we thought it might have been an airplane crashing into the building," Murray said.
"But we were standing around wondering what was going on. And I quickly realized it was an earthquake. And then everybody started shouting out, out, out."
Samantha Lehman, 14, was in a downtown shopping mall when the tremors began, and the fear among the people there was palpable.
"They told us not to run but people were running out," Lehman said. She said she was "still kind of shaky, but I think we'll be ok."
David French, 53-year-old state worker from Cicero, New York, said he was at his computer inside his home near Syracuse when he felt his chair shake.
'I thought the chair was breaking or something,' he said. 'I looked over and my filing cabinet was moving.'
The quake prompted several calls to state police in the Adirondacks area.
'A little shake, nothing too big,' is how Trooper Mark Revette described the temblor. 'It happens. We get a couple of these a year.'
Kellie Tassone, 40, was at home on Oneida Lake in Cicero.
'My dog picked his head up just before it happened and kind of looked at me,' she said. Then the sliding door started to rattle 'and the house was shaking.'
'” With files from The Associated Press
Re: Just had a small earthquake
Apparently it was felt here in CT too. I'm with Russ though.
http://www.ctnow.com/news/hc-canada-ear … 9449.story
HARTFORD '” '” A 5.0-magnitude earthquake hit the Ontario-Quebec border region in Canada around 1:40 p.m., and people across Connecticut and New England reported feeling the ground shake.
Workers at Hamilton-Sundstrand in Windsor Locks, Pratt & Whitney in East Hartford and in Simsbury reported feeling tremors. Buildings were evacuated in Windsor, but there were no reports of serious damage.
The Hartford evacuated its Simsbury and Windsor offices about 1:45 p.m. for less than an hour.
Spokesman David Snowden said he did not know how many people left the buildings and for how long, but the Route 10 campus has about 2,700 people, mostly in life insurance, some in property-casualty.
There were also unconfirmed reports that The Hartford Financial Services Group evacuated employees in Windsor.
Tremors were felt across the north central part of the state, including at Hamilton Sundstrand. When he heard about the Ottowa earthquake, Vernon Cormier, professor of physics and geophysics at UConn, said he checked the university's online seismic station to check for tremors in New England.
"I saw wiggles on a seismograph. They show the arrival of different waves," Cormier said. "There are several types of vibrations or elastic waves that an earthquake will incite. They travel like waves."
The waves can travel at speeds of up to 3 kilometers per second.
"The strong ones that people are likely to feel are called surface waves and they travel outward like expanding rings in a pond," he said.
"The felt area for earthquakes of this size in northeastern North America are typically much wider Â… than are typical for the western US," Cormier said. "This is due to properties of the rocks in the upper portion of the earth. The rocks in the northeast attenuate seismic energy much less."
The earthquake shook buildings across upstate New York and into Canada and Vermont.
Federal officials say the quake was centered just north of Ottawa.
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Re: Just had a small earthquake
I absolutely felt it, it was crazy for a few seconds. No damage or anything but I was caught completely off guard and then googled 'earthquake' after to see what was up.
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