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Mark Castner, director of the Braun-Ruddick Seismographic Station at Canisius College, observes some data on Friday, October 26. Castner explained the boom that residents of Niagara County heard early Friday with the magnitude 2.5 earthquake in Olcott.

Canisius scientist explains earthquake "boom:



Buffalo (WBEN) -- It was a magnitude 2.5 earthquake that generated a "boom" sound that some Niagara County residents reported early Friday morning.

A local scientist has offered an explanation.

What residents heard -- and didn't feel -- is quite common for an earthquake this size, says Mark Castner, director of the Braun-Ruddick Seismograph Station at Canisius College.

In explaining, Castner says the highest frequency seismic waves are typically just a little below human hearing, which means people sense them more as a "boom" more so than actually hearing a noise.

"It's not uncommon for people to hear a boom or a rumble from an earthquake, but then there are lots of earthquakes where nobody hears any noise of that type," Castner says.

Castner says Western New York has a small magnitude earthquake about once every two years, but they're not evenly distributed.

 

  


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