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UK shaken by 'significant' earthquake

PA
Wednesday, 27 February 2008

 

PAUL BARKER/AFP/Getty Images

A man works to clear the debris of a collapsed chimney on a roof in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire

A "significant" earthquake shook the UK in the early hours of this morning, causing damage to buildings and leaving at least one person injured.

The tremor hit at around 1am and was measured at 5.2 on the Richter scale.

Its epicentre was near Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, but the effects of the quake were felt throughout the country.

As far away as Wales, Scotland and London, there were reports of residents being woken from their sleep by the tremor.

Emergency services across England received a high level of calls following the incident, many from people who were frightened when they were woken up to find their home shaking.

It resulted in at least one injury. A man from Barnsley, South Yorkshire, required hospital treatment after a chimney collapsed and fell into his bedroom.

A spokeswoman for South Yorkshire Ambulance Service said: "We had an emergency call to Wombwell, Barnsley. A chimney had come through the bedroom roof."

A Lincolnshire Police spokeswoman said the force took dozens of calls from concerned residents but had no reports of anyone being injured.

"It made us very, very busy for about an hour," she said.

The British Geological Survey (BGS) initially gave the magnitude for the 12.56am earthquake as 5.3 on the Richter scale but later said it was closer to 5.2.

It said the centre was five miles east of Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, and about 15 miles south west of Grimsby.

Seismologist Brian Baptie of the BGS said: "This is a significant earthquake for the UK and will have been widely felt across England and Wales."

The BGS said it records around 200 earthquakes in the UK each year - an eighth of which can be felt by residents.

It said earthquakes of this size occur in the mainland UK around every 30 years but are more common in offshore areas.

Today's quake is the largest since 1984 when an earthquake measuring 5.4 on the Richter scale shook the Lleyn Peninsula of north Wales and was widely felt across England and Wales.

Last April, residents in Kent were hit by a similar tremor. Residents in five streets in Folkestone had to be evacuated due to structural damage as a result of the earthquake.

Today's quake was felt across the UK.

People as far apart as Yorkshire, Manchester, Merseyside, Lincolnshire, Oxfordshire, Gloucestershire and London said they felt the tremor.

Bernard Wakefield-Heath, 49, of Stroud, in Gloucestershire, said the tremor shook his block of flats.

Mr Wakefield-Heath, a business consultant, said: "I live in the middle section and I could feel everything around me move, shaking quite considerably.

"It lasted about 10 to 15 seconds at least.

"I remember the quake a few years ago and when you feel something like that, you don't forget it."

John Jenkin, from Bourne in Lincolnshire, was woken by the tremors and said objects fell from shelves.

"I was woken up. It was hell," said Mr Jenkin. "The police around here suddenly became very busy."

A woman in Notting Hill, west London, reported that her radio was rattling up and down on a shelf for several seconds when the tremor struck and it was also felt by reporters in Parliament.

In Howden, East Yorkshire, there were accounts of an office building shaking.

The North West Ambulance Service said its crews reported feeling the tremor from Macclesfield to Southport but had no reports of injuries.

A spokeswoman for the North West Ambulance Service said: "We felt the tremors here in our control room in Anfield.

"We have had a few of our vehicles reporting that they felt the tremors as far as Macclesfield and up towards Southport but no actual calls from the public."

Humberside Fire and Rescue Service dealt with around 200 calls about the earthquake overnight but said they were still dealing with incidents this morning.

A spokesman said: "We've still got some active incidents as daylight has come and people have seen the damage.

"People are waking up and going to work and finding bits have been displaced on chimney stacks or garden walls."

Most of the incidents crews responded to overnight involved collapsed chimneys and dangerous roofs.

The spokesman said the worst-hit area appeared to be Grimsby, North East Lincolnshire, but other areas affected included Cleethorpes, Goole, Bridlington and Hull.

He said: "Whilst everyone living in the region was certainly shocked by the experience, spare a thought for Blue Watch in the Humberside Fire and Rescue Service control room who were terrified as the whole of the headquarters building shook through the tremor.

"Control room staff bravely gave reassurance and advice to the many callers whilst not really understanding what had actually happened and being scared themselves."

Former Liberal Democrat MP David Rendel said he felt the tremor at exactly 1am at his home in Thatcham, Berkshire.

"I was sitting at my desk downstairs when I heard quite a large noise and I thought there was a lorry or a train going by but I'm not near a railway line and my lane outside is very small for lorries.

"There then seemed to be a shaking and then at this stage I realised it was an earthquake because it was going on so long. I got up and I felt giddy. It was very definite.

"I went upstairs to see if my son was awake and what he thought and he was coming down to tell me he thought there had been an earthquake but perhaps it was not enough to wake people up."

Local radio on the south coast had reports from people just north of Portsmouth and in Dorset who said the they felt the tremor.

But both Hampshire Police and Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service said there no incidents reported overnight.

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164 Comments

i want donkey

Posted by rowan | 02.04.08, 14:15 GMT

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i was frightened when my husband wasn't at home, so i had to wake up my son because i was confused and thought there was a burgular downstairs! in the morning i was listening to the radio and they said there was an earthquake.

Posted by Helen | 02.03.08, 12:10 GMT

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Hello

Posted by Amoor | 01.03.08, 00:44 GMT

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Wednesday 27th. February 2008

Short dark winter days
the dirth of warm sun’s rays
compounded his depression.
“Sell the house,” friends said,
“Move on and leave the family ghosts behind.”
The agents gave him bumff and he read,
they were right. The lesson
clear, he needed no-one to remind
him of the need to declutter,
he didn’t need to keep
the history.
Then, reassured, drifting towards sleep,
was that the mutter
of his father’s voice?
The house shook, the walls trembled.
They moved,
reproved
his actions.
The ghosts were with him. Bolt upright he sat in bed.
“Forgive me!” he cried,
“Oh believe me, I have tried!”

And on the fateful night
the earth moved for many right across the land,
orgasmic tremors, waking and alerting
a sleeping population that
“Times they are a-changing.”


MJ 28.02.08

Posted by Moyra Jean | 28.02.08, 18:18 GMT

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I'd been in bed about two hours and was struggling to get to sleep, things going round and around in my head. Suddenly I was aware of a slight rumbling but didn't think anything of it as we quite often get heavy lorries going through the village to the local feed mill. This time it seemed different. My wife stirred, the rumble was getting more intense, the room started to tremble quite violently, we both sat up I honestly thought the lorry had left the road and was heading for the house. I leapt out of bed and ran toward the window conscious that the shaking was all around. There was nothing to be seen, I felt really afraid the hairs on the back of my neck stood on end I was very cold. What was it, perhaps it was a terrorist attack at the oil refinery at Grimsby or maybe an earthquake? I don't think so this is the Uk!!. It went quite. I returned to bed , now I had more things going around in my head. My wife slept on. Needless to say I didn't.

Posted by Don Irvine | 28.02.08, 18:05 GMT

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At around 1am this morning in my little house in Matlock Bath I became aware of a loud roar and vibration. My first thought was "what the bloody ell is a lorry doing driving past at this time?" This was soon dismissed as the shaking got louder and more severe! To my delight and slight trepidation the realization of what was really happening engulfed me! WOW EARTHQUAKE!!

Quickly remembering a film I saw years ago about a San Francisco tremor I looked around for the nearest table to take refuge under. My table however is an IKEA budget special. About 1 foot of the floor, made of the cheapest possible materials passable by British standards. "Not good enough" I thought to myself imagining huge pieces of ceiling piercing the 1mm laminate and 2cm of soft chip board in front of me! Obviously during the San Francisco earth quakes of the 80s, IKEA was an unknown quantity. Unperturbed I caught glimpse of the second place the film had quite rightly pointed out as being a haven for all caught in the ferocity of land moving events. Yes of course the DOOR FRAME! Like a half drunk slightly dazed super hero I dashed for the door. Now secure thanks to the T.V. watching foresight I had shown so many years ago. I enjoyed the remaining last few seconds of what is unfortunately a far too rare event.

Convinced that everyone else would share in my wonder I waited patiently for others to leave their homes and join together hand in hand as YES! we had survived! I imagined the parties that must have gone on for days following the second world war! Was this it? Was this the moment we have been waiting for that will bring all humanity finally together. The turning point we so so need where man can throw away his selfish shackles of ego and greed and for once stand in unison together and say no more to the corporate monster that has stolen our lives and forever leaves us in bodage?

Needless to say I was more than a little disappointed when 5 minutes lated I was forced to return indoors. It appears the only other that shared in my excitement was a distant dog. Barking the wonders of what could have been. Now under complete disillusionment I sat back drank some more. About 5 hours later I awoke in a now awkward sitting position on the sofa where the whole wondrous event had taken place. Straightening my neck and spine to something resembling a straight line I made my way to bed. What a night!!

John Scott.

Posted by John Scott | 28.02.08, 16:40 GMT

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It must be a scary event for the residents of the UK. I am English, living close to San Francisco, Northern California, USA for the last 6 + years, and my husband, our 2 dogs and I have lived through hundreds of earthquakes. We typically have 100 + a week! Honest. We live in the region of the Hayward, San Andreas, & Calaveras fault lines, not good.
Our dogs sense it first! But once it's over, you breathe a sigh of relief. I feel for you all.

Posted by Elizabeth W | 28.02.08, 16:10 GMT

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To all the people who said it was nothing, look at the facts. It was felt in five countries, England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales and Holland. It had a radious of more than 200 miles. To me that sounds quite big.
Bri.

Posted by Bri. | 28.02.08, 10:15 GMT

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This appears to be the second such incident this year. Although this tremor was significantly stronger than the last one, I soon figured what it was. It is not the first time nor will it be the last, if anything, tremors will become more frequent.

The last one was at about 3 or 4m in January when most people were sleep. As a result, little was reported of it in the news.

City of Oxford.

Posted by Adam | 28.02.08, 00:57 GMT

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I live in central Portsmouth, and i felt the shakes here, and it really did feel like a huge lorry was roaring past our house! Scarey stuffs x

Posted by J Sheridan | 28.02.08, 00:17 GMT

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