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Earthquakes are to be expected on the West Coast. In Ohio? Not so much

LEILA FADEL, HOST:

Earthquakes - they're kind of part of life on the West Coast. In Ohio, not so much. But that's exactly where there's been a whole lot of shaking going on, at least for a few minutes. The state's experienced several in the past year. Ideastream Public Media's Abigail Bottar reports.

ABIGAIL BOTTAR, BYLINE: It was late Sunday night - about 11 p.m. - on August 27, and Margaret Bushman was finishing a good book when something odd happened.

MARGARET BUSHMAN: The couch shook, and the whole, kind of, house was shaking. But it lasted about that long. And I heard this rumbling sound that at first I thought was my dryer. And then I said, no, my dryer's not that loud in my living room.

BOTTAR: Bushman lives in Madison, Ohio, along the shores of Lake Erie, northeast of Cleveland. She realized quickly that what she felt was an earthquake - not one that threw her house out of disarray or caused harm. But it was noticeable, clocking in with a magnitude of 3.6.

PAUL EARLE: I mean, you can have an earthquake this large pretty much anywhere.

BOTTAR: Paul Earle is a seismologist with the United States Geological Survey.

EARLE: I mean, this is not a huge earthquake. It does not take a huge fault to generate an earthquake of this size.

BOTTAR: What northeast Ohio has is a grouping of faults, faults that are miles below Lake Erie and underground in the bedrock. And earthquakes are not uncommon here. Last month, there were 11 quakes in Ohio, five of them in this Lake County region, and the one in late August, although minor by earthquake standards, was the largest by far. Vickie Wyatt lives in Geneva, Ohio, an area also affected. She says the sound of the earthquake gave her a clue that this was bigger than normal.

VICKIE WYATT: We had that rumbling. Like, it was getting a little louder. You could hear it and kind of feel it before it hit.

BOTTAR: Two aftershocks were recorded after the quake. Seismologist Earle says it's common for one earthquake to trigger others.

EARLE: It's more like popcorn going off, where you have a kernel - kernel explodes, and then a bunch of kernels explode, and then it stops for - calms down for a while and so forth and so on. So it's not surprising to see a variation in the number of earthquakes with time.

BOTTAR: In Ohio, that's meant a lot of low-level tremors, which typically cause little, if any, damage. Joe Busher, the head of the Lake County Emergency Management Agency, says that was the case for this latest quake in northeast Ohio.

JOE BUSHER: That's because of strong building codes and the enforcement of those codes throughout the county that our structures all held up well during that event.

BOTTAR: Vickie Wyatt agrees. She says nothing was damaged in her home, and she feels prepared for any future Ohio earthquakes that may come.

WYATT: We can be pretty self-sufficient. We grow a garden and hunt and fish. We always have stuff, and we have a generator.

BOTTAR: She's just hoping she doesn't have to use it anytime soon, even though she lives in a seismically active region.

For NPR News, I'm Abigail Bottar in Lake County, Ohio.

(SOUNDBITE OF ERIK WOLLO'S "BLUE SKY") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Abigail Bottar is a junior at Kent State University. She is pursuing a major in political science with a concentration in American politics and minors in history and women's studies. Additionally, Abigail is starting her second semester copy editing for The Burr.