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Geologist and Rutgers University professor Alexander Gates explaines why New Jersey may be having so many earthquakes.
Earthquakes rattled the nation's two largest metropolitan areas Tuesday, sending a jolt across population centers of tens of millions, but thankfully didn't cause any impacts.
HILLSDALE, N.J. (AP) — A second small earthquake within three days rattled the New York metropolitan area on Tuesday. The 2.7 ...
The recent temblors were classified as “weak,” and may have been connected to a bigger earthquake last year in the area.
What makes it different for New York City is there’s just a lot of infrastructure. So even a relatively low magnitude ...
The earthquake struck at 12:11 p.m. Tuesday with an epicenter near Hillsdale, N.J., roughly 20 miles from Manhattan. At 7.7 miles deep, the quake is considered shallow, according to the USGS.
Tuesday’s magnitude 2.7 earthquake was recorded just south of Hillsdale, N.J. — about 25 miles northwest of Midtown Manhattan ...
A magnitude 2.7 earthquake rattled parts of New York and New Jersey around midday on Aug. 5, according to data from the U.S.
A 2.7-magnitude quake rattled the Tri-State area around midday Tuesday. The epicenter was located in Hillsdale, New Jersey, ...