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There have been five recorded small earthquakes hit the region in a four-day span, all hitting in southeast Missouri and ...
However, while western Tennessee has a higher frequency of damaging earthquakes shaking, the risk is not that low in central and eastern Tennessee. In the area of today’s quake, USGS says it is ...
A 4.1-magnitude earthquake struck near Greenback, Tennessee, on Saturday morning, sending tremors as far as Atlanta and western North Carolina. Over 23,000 people reported feeling it, but no major ...
Tennessee’s middle region has only experienced a handful of 2.5 magnitude or higher earthquakes between 1924 and 2024, including Murfreesboro in 1997 and Franklin in 2001, according to the USGS ...
When thinking about natural disasters in the area tornadoes, flooding, and extreme heat come to mind, but earthquakes are another hazard that could impact Middle Tennessee. Skip to content WKRN News 2 ...
In just over 24 hours, three earthquakes have shaken Tennessee, but experts say this is not a rare phenomenon. 1 weather alerts 1 closings/delays. Watch Now. 1 weather alerts 1 closings/delays.
ATLANTA (AP) — A 4.1-magnitude earthquake in Tennessee woke up families and rattled homes as far away as Atlanta as it spread tremors across portions of the southern U.S. on Saturday morning.
A 4.1 magnitude earthquake was reported Saturday morning in eastern Tennessee and it was felt across North America. Thousands of reports flooded the U.S. Geological Survey website, some as far ...
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — Earthquakes in Tennessee aren’t in headlines every day. Last week, Tennessee recorded several earthquakes. While the quakes were relatively small, researchers now ...
ATLANTA — An earthquake of 4.1 preliminary magnitude was reported Saturday morning in Tennessee and was felt in Atlanta, western North Carolina and elsewhere, according to the U.S. Geological ...
At least two people said on social media that they felt the earthquake, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Earthquakes in East Tennessee often occur so far underground (as far as 20 miles deep in recent cases) that it's extremely difficult to study the fault system and determine patterns.
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