The Standard Journal

NYC area hit by biggest quake in 140 years; flights disrupted

- By Brian K. Sullivan Nacha Cattan Mia Gindis and Skylar Woodhouse

NEW YORK — The New York area’s strongest earthquake in 140 years rattled northern New Jersey on Friday morning, shaking office buildings in Manhattan and halting air traffic.

The preliminar­y 4.8 magnitude temblor was the strongest in the area since 1884, according to the US Geological Survey. It occurred near Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, and was felt as far away as Massachuse­tts and Washington, D.C.

“I just saw the mirrors on both sides of our wall shaking and my dog’s reaction. She’s a little French bulldog. She freaked out,” said Milena Altman, 37, a self-employed social media manager in Queens. “I ran into the bathroom doorway and just started immediatel­y thinking of all these other things that it could be other than an earthquake.”

The earthquake caused travel delays throughout the New York area, and Newark’s Liberty Internatio­nal Airport issued a ground stop for flights. New Jersey Transit said commuters can expect up to 20-minute delays in both directions due to bridge inspection­s, and Amtrak implemente­d speed restrictio­ns.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams said officials were checking for any damages.

“Our preliminar­y reports do not indicate major life safety or infrastruc­ture issues from the earthquake,” Adams said in a post on X.

The most vulnerable structures are probably older homes with brick faces and chimneys, said John Bellini, a geophysici­st with the USGS.

“We consider it to be moderate — it is capable of causing some damage,” he said.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and her counterpar­ts in New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia were all in contact with emergency managers.

Major earthquake­s are uncommon in the New York area, although a minor temblor occurred in January.

“As I was closing the door to the house, I heard a loud crash and then everything started shaking,” said Nancy Rochelle, who lives in Lebanon, New Jersey. “I thought that the garage door was coming off of the tracks and that it was crashing. But then I realized the whole house was shaking and things were falling off of the shelf in the kitchen.”

More than 100 earthquake­s have been recorded in that part of New Jersey, but most people don’t notice quakes until they reach magnitude 2 or higher, said Paul Caruso, a geophysici­st with the USGS.

Typically, quakes on the East Coast are felt over a wider area than out west because of the age of the rocks. The rocks in the east are more continuous, whereas they are broken up with faults in the west.

 ?? Mike Groll/Office of Governor Kathy Hochul/TNS ?? Governor Kathy Hochul updates New Yorkers on the state's response after an earthquake on Friday in Albany, New York.
Mike Groll/Office of Governor Kathy Hochul/TNS Governor Kathy Hochul updates New Yorkers on the state's response after an earthquake on Friday in Albany, New York.

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