It was the strongest earthquake to affect New Jersey since the 5.3
Mfa1783 New Jersey earthquake,[6] and the strongest to hit New York City since an estimated 5.0 magnitude earthquake on August 10, 1884.[7][3]
Tectonic setting
The causative fault for the earthquake was likely in the area of the
Ramapo Fault zone,[8] which extends from
Pennsylvania to
New York[9] and was formed by the break-up of the supercontinent
Pangaea during the
Late Triassic.[10] Another possible origin is the Flemington Fault, a younger fault in the same area.[11]
The
Whitehouse Station, New Jersey area had previously experienced an earthquake on March 14, 2024.[12] The USGS considers this to be part of the event sequence.[13]
As of April 12, over 50 aftershocks were reported,[5][16] the strongest of which had a magnitude of 3.7 and took place about 4 miles (6 km) from
Gladstone around 17:59.[2][17][4] The
USGS projected a 12% chance of an aftershock with a magnitude greater than 3 and a 1% chance of a stronger earthquake with a magnitude above 4.[2][3] An aftershock of 2.6 was felt about 5 kilometres (3 mi) southwest of Gladstone on about 10:25 AM local time on April 10.[18]
Impact
Several buildings in New York City, Philadelphia, and
Long Island were shaken.[19][15] The USGS estimated that the earthquake was felt by about 42 million people in the area.[15]
Up to 150 buildings were damaged across New York City, and a school gym in
East New York sustained damage.[25] Four three-story houses on
Seventh Avenue in
Newark, New Jersey, were damaged by the earthquake. Twenty-eight residents were evacuated, but no injuries were reported. Three of the houses were "partially toppled" and were subsequently condemned.[2][6] The upper portion of the 264-year old
Col. John Taylor's Grist Mill collapsed into a road.[20] Additionally, the earthquake caused water main breaks in
Essex County and
Morris County.[26][27]
The first emergency alert sent to New York City residents came 26 minutes after the earthquake to subscribers of the
Notify NYC service. A
Wireless Emergency Alert was sent out to the broader region even later, with New Yorkers reporting it arriving 40 minutes after the earthquake.[31] Amid criticism,
New York City Emergency Management Commissioner
Zach Iscol defended the delayed response in a press conference, saying that "Twenty minutes is very fast for a public alert,"[32] and that they needed that time to confirm that it was indeed an earthquake.[31]
The
PATCO Speedline was temporarily suspended for inspection "out of an abundance of caution."[6]Amtrak train speeds were restricted throughout the Northeast while railroad tracks were being inspected for damage, and
NJ Transit trains on all lines were expected to be delayed by up to 20 minutes due to track inspection.[33]AirTrain Newark at the Newark Liberty International Airport was also closed for inspection while its flights were ungrounded.[2]
Within hours of the earthquake, a custom T-shirt shop in Manhattan began printing a joke souvenir reading "I survived the NYC earthquake April 5, 2024." The store put it on the shop window and a pedestrian took a photo of it, which was shared widely on social media, causing hundreds of sales.[35][36][37]
See also
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
^Sykes, L.R., J.G. Armbruster, W.Y. Kim, and L. Seeber (2008), Observations and Tectonic Setting of Historic and Instrumentally Located Earthquakes in the Greater New York City–Philadelphia Area, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 98(4), 1696–1719.