
July 2016 – FLORIDA – An
 earthquake struck off the coast of Florida on Saturday (July 16), a 
rare event in a relatively tectonically peaceful region. The 
3.7-magnitude quake had an epicenter that was 104 miles (168 kilometers)
 east-northeast of Daytona Beach, according to the U.S. Geological 
Survey (USGS). It hit at about 4 p.m. local time and originated at a 
depth of about 3 miles (5 km). According to the USGS ShakeMap, some weak
 tremors were reported and picked up by scientific instruments on the 
mainland, but the quake was too weak to cause any damage.
Earthquakes are rare in Florida, and 
the reason for the relative peace has to do with Florida’s position on 
the North American plate. The state sits on the passive margin of the 
plate, a transition from land to ocean that isn’t seismically active. In
 contrast, the western end of the North American plate — the active 
margin — is slipping under the Pacific Plate, triggering the 
medium-to-large earthquakes that are commonly experienced in California.
According to the state’s Department of 
Environmental Protection (DEP), there have only been about 24 “seismic 
events” reported since 1727. A 1997 review suggested that only five were
 actual earthquakes. The Florida Geological Survey rounded up these 
events in a 1991 report that illustrates the challenge of identifying 
past “earthquakes” in the state. Many of the reported temblors have come
 from newspaper reports or other unofficial sources. For example, a 
“severe quake” was reported to have hit St. Augustine in 1727, but all 
original reports of the event have been lost.
At some point in 1930, there were 
reports of shaking across Central Florida — tremors that some attributed
 to an explosion of some sort and others blamed on an earthquake. In 
January 1945, the windows at the De Land courthouse in Volusia County 
shook – the only evidence that anything might have happened. Rattling 
doors and windows were also reported on Captiva Island in 1948 and 
northwest of Tallahassee in 1952.
Other reports of temblors are easily 
linked to large quakes that occurred outside of Florida, but they were 
strong enough to be felt in the state. For example, in 1886, a large 
earthquake struck Charleston, South Carolina, and the shaking spread 
across northern Florida. Floridians also felt shaking from several 
aftershocks of the South Carolina quake. More recently, a magnitude-5.8 
quake centered in the Gulf of Mexico was felt in Florida. There has 
never been a recorded earthquake with an epicenter under Florida, 
according to the DEP.  –Live Science
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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