Norfolk is rocked by 3.7 magnitude earthquake off the coast
Norfolk is rocked by 3.7 magnitude earthquake off the coast of Great Yarmouth – days after homes in Essex were hit by tremor that ‘sounded like a bomb’
- The earthquake hit an area 56 miles off the coastline in the North Sea
- British Geological Survey subsequently tweeted to confirm the seismic activity
Norfolk has been struck by a 3.7-magnitude earthquake just days after a tremor in Essex that ‘sounded like a bomb’.
The earthquake is understood to have hit an area 56 miles off the coastline in the North Sea at around 7.14am on Sunday, France’s Military Applications Division has said.
The tremor measured 3.7 on the Richter scale and had a ‘shallow’ depth of a ten kilometres – meaning it was more likely to be felt by residents.
It took place around 38 miles from Sea Palling, 42 miles from Cromer and 45 miles from Great Yarmouth – with residents of each coastal village having reported feeling the earthquake.
The British Geological Survey subsequently tweeted to confirm the seismic activity., as well as its precise location.
The earthquake is understood to have hit an area 56 miles off the coastline in the North Sea at around 7.14am on Sunday
It comes after a 2.6-magnitude earthquake was also registered in Chelmsford, Essex, at around 5am on Thursday.
On resident said they felt their entire property shaking, while a second added that their radiators were rattling.
Others described the tremor as ‘sounding like a bomb’ and ‘like an underground going under our bungalow’.
One resident told BBC Essex: ‘It was just after five this morning there was a very loud bang.
‘It was very strange and my son shot out of bed as well and we were both looking at one another going, “what was that?
‘I thought we were getting broken into… and there were a few other neighbours out in the street just wondering their heads, giving it, so we all heard it.’
Dog walkers are pictured walking along Heacham Beach in Norfolk at low tide
This morning’s earthquake comes after an asteroid lit up the night sky over the English Channel after entering the Earth’s atmosphere in the early hours.
The 3ft meteoroid created a shooting star and an ‘airburst’ that could be seen across southern England and Wales and in parts of northern France as far south as Paris.
The rock, called 2023 CX1, entered the atmosphere around two miles off the French coast at 3am, creating a fireball as it disintegrated into small pieces which landed in the sea.
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