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Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 1:07 am
by Hairstylistmom
Well,I just experienced what an earthquake feels like. Not normal in Illinois, but reports say it registered 5.2 on the scale. It shook my entire bed and awoke me. I wanted to panic, but thanks to my skills learned here, I was amazingly calm. Did anyone else get a rude awakening this morning? It says it was felt from Indiana to Kentucky to even Atlanta.

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 1:49 am
by Guest
Yeah, my wife and I were both awakened this morning by it. The whole house was shaking. This is actually the third one I've experienced here in Illinois. There was one in 1987, as well as one in 2002. It's kind of a helpless feeling, to say the least, but I always know that God's in control. :)

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 2:02 am
by Guest
Wow! I live in Bolingbrook, IL and I defintely felt a little shaking and rattling noise. I have lived in CA and Japan in my childhood, so I know what an earthquake feels like - this was odd - cause I'm in bed going "what is that noise outside" but knew it was not just outside and I did feel vibration. I mean it was very mild, but my brain didn't register it was an earthquake cause you don't think of IL as a state to get them. Now that I'm seeing this post and my husband just called me to ask me if I felt anything last night, it all clicked. Kinda wild!

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 2:19 am
by Guest
I'm in the city of Chicago and I didn't feel anything resembling an earthquake.

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 2:50 am
by Guest
Im in Elgin and my neighbors said they felt it but I felt nothing. I guess I sleep better than I thought.

LOL
Dodger

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 3:13 am
by Guest
I was asleep too. Maybe that's why I didn't feel it. lol :D

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 3:42 am
by Guest
Felt it in Cincinnati Ohio also, and I think it woke me up out here in Southeastern Indiana but, I rolled over and went back to sleep. :D

Keep earthquakes out west, I'll stick with tornadoes please.
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CNN) -- People nearly 900 miles away felt a magnitude-5.2 earthquake that shook southern Illinois (*West Salem IL) early Friday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Rubble lies in the street Friday in Louisville, Kentucky, after part of a cornice fell off a building.

There were no immediate reports of major damage after the predawn quake, which struck at 4:36 a.m. (5:36 a.m. ET).

However, some minor damage was seen in the region.

In Mount Carmel, Illinois, a porch collapsed, briefly trapping a woman in her home, The Associated Press reported. She wasn't hurt and was freed quickly.

Debris fell on a sidewalk and shattered in Louisville, Kentucky, after part of a cornice fell off a brick building, according to footage from the city's CNN affiliate WHAS-TV. Watch as the quake sends bricks tumbling »

The epicenter of the earthquake -- the strongest in the region in 40 years -- was about seven miles below ground and 38 miles north-northwest of Evansville, Indiana, the USGS said. Map »

Nearly 10,000 people had sent reports of shaking to the USGS Web site by 9 a.m. ET.

People as far away as Niceville, Florida, 891 miles away, reported to the USGS Web site that they had felt the quake.

"Pretty typically for these eastern-central U.S. earthquakes, they're felt over a very broad area," said Dave Applegate, USGS senior science adviser, adding that quakes in California tend to be more localized.

The Earth's crust is older and less fractured in the Stress than in California, and the region's deep sediment "shakes a lot," Applegate said.

"Older crust, when you have an earthquake, it rings like a bell," he said.

The USGS said the largest historical earthquake in the region -- magnitude 5.4 -- shook southern Illinois in 1968.

People as far away as southwest Michigan and northeast Georgia e-mailed CNN to say they felt Friday's temblor.

Air traffic was halted for an hour at Indianapolis International Airport while the control tower was evacuated, CNN affiliate WRTV-TV in the Indiana city reported. Watch as a TV newscast gets a jolt »

And buildings swayed in Chicago's Loop, The Associated Press reported.

"It shook our house where it woke me up," David Behm of Philo, Illinois, told the AP. "Windows were rattling, and you could hear it. The house was shaking inches. For people in central Illinois, this is a big deal. It's not like California."

Radio talk-show host George Noory said he felt the quake in his St. Louis home.

"Everything shook," Noory said. "I thought the building was going to collapse." Watch as the talk-show host describes the early-morning shock »

Bonnie Lucas, who hosts a morning show at WHO-AM in Des Moines, told the AP she felt her chair move for five seconds."

There ya go, news of the day. :D

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 5:55 am
by Guest
Wow! if you can live through an earthquake, you can live through anything! The thought of even having an earthquake makes me anxious! LOL!

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 6:24 am
by Guest
We had an aftershock at 10:16. I was upstairs working on the floor and the whole house shook. I'm just south of Springfield, Illinois.

Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 8:27 am
by Guest
Growing up in Pennsylvania I went thru many summers with tornado warnings and horrible thunder storms and when I moved to Calif. I went thru the earthquakes here. Don't know which is worse. With the earthquakes we have no warning ahead of time so I don't get the anticipatory anxiety and fear I used to when the tornado warnings went out, but during those few seconds of a big quake I think I literally stopped breathing. It's a frightening feeling when you're not used to them.