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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

East Texas

Posted 2:47 am  Friday, May 18, 2012


Geophysicist: Second Temblor A Sign More Quaking Ahead
By KENNETH DEAN
Staff Writer

Residents of Shelby County were awakened Thursday morning by an earthquake in the same vicinity of last week's quake.

Shelby County Emergency Management Coordinator Danny Lawrence said the quake shook the fire station where he was on duty and there was minor damage around the county, but no major damage or serious injuries were reported.

“It was a minor ground shaking that shook windows and rattled some dishes, but I haven’t been informed of any major structural damage in the county,” he said.

A statement from the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office stated an elderly woman was injured when she was thrown from her bed, but the statement said those injuries were minor.

Sheriff’s officials said the 4.3-magnitude quake occurred about three miles east of Timpson and lasted about 15 seconds.

John Bellini, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake information Center, said the two quakes in one week could indicate the area might see a swarm of quakes in the area over the next few weeks.

He explained that swarms of small quakes in areas not usually affected by earthquakes are not unusual.

Bellini said he did not expect any quakes to grow in strength and he could not say whether fracking, a process used to extract oil and gas from the earth, played any role in the two quakes.

Bellini said quakes strike areas where there are faults and LaRell Neilson, a geology professor with Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, said last week there's an active fault system that runs through East Texas, stretching from Mount Enterprise along Texas Highway 84 to Timpson.
It's called the Mount Enterprise Fault.

The fault is active and delivers low-level quakes, such as Thursday's, fairly regularly. He said the last one he could recall struck the area around 1994 and measured between 3.5 and 4 on the United States Geological Survey's equipment.

Lawrence said USGS data shows there was a strong quake in the area in 1957 and then every few years, there are small quakes that most people never realize have occurred.

“These past two quakes have everyone a little uneasy right now,” he said. “If we have another then it will really get people upset, because this is not something we are used to seeing like the folks out in California.”



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