Earthquake near Hull and Grimsby 'felt 100km away'
- Published
A 3.9-magnitude earthquake centred in north-east Lincolnshire has reportedly been felt up to 60 miles (100km) away.
The British Geological Survey (BGS) said it happened at 23:14 BST on Saturday, with the epicentre in Grimsby at a depth of 11 miles.
It was felt mainly in Lincolnshire and Hull, the BGS added.
It comes nearly a decade after the 5.2-magnitude earthquake in Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, which was felt widely across England and Wales.
Glen Ford, a seismologist for the BGS, said: "It is of the size we would expect people to start reporting it to us.
"But it is actually much smaller than the one 10 years ago at Market Rasen, 30km from this earthquake, that was 90 times bigger."
Independent organisation European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) said it had received reports from people 100km from the epicentre who had felt the tremor.
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The BGS said it had received reports including how "the whole house shook for a couple of seconds"; "[I] heard a rumble with a simultaneous trembling": "the bed started to shake"; "the radiator jolted"; and someone who "thought it was a lorry crashing outside".
However, it added that such earthquakes were not uncommon in the UK and happened about every two years.
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Many people went on social media to ask what it was they had just felt.
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The quake also brought out the humour in some people living in the area . An "I Survived the June 2018 Earthquake" T-shirt has already been advertised online.
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The largest earthquake in the UK this year took place in Cwmllynfell in south Wales on 17 February and registered a magnitude of 4.6.
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- Published17 February 2018
- Published9 March 2018