Mysterious South Carolina Earthquake Activity Returns

Mysterious earthquake activity that started 4 years ago in South Carolina but was on recent pause appears to be back again; USGS reports that seismic hotspot Elgin, South Carolina recorded a magnitude 2.6 earthquake on Saturday, April 26, at 6:33 am. The earthquake, which had an epicenter only 2.4 km deep, is located just 2,500 feet away from the epicenter of an earthquake that struck on Thursday afternoon. That event was a weaker 2.3 magnitude event which struck from a depth of 2.4 km too.

Dozens of people used the “Did you feel it?” web-based reporting tool operated by USGS to report they felt shaking from Saturday’s earthquake. According to USGS, earthquakes with a magnitude of 2.0 or less are rarely felt or heard by people, but once they exceed 2.0 , more and more people can feel them. While damage is possible with magnitude 3.0 events or greater, significant damage and casualties usually don’t occur until the magnitude of a seismic event rises to a 5.5 or greater rated event.

On Monday, December 27, 2021 at 2:18 pm in the afternoon, an unusual earthquake struck in this same general area and the quakes have continued on and off since, with dozens reported in 2022,  2023, and 2024. That first 3.3 magnitude earthquake hit 30 miles north of Columbia, South Carolina at a depth of only 3.1 km. More than 3,100 residents reported to USGS they felt it at the time, with one report of shaking coming from as far away as Rock Hill, which is at the North/South Carolina state border. While many felt the earthquake, there was no reported damage in the Palmetto State. That earthquake was followed by 10 more ranging in intensity between a magnitude 1.5 to a magnitude 2.6 event. The second earthquake struck three hours twenty minutes after the first one. The last earthquake in that series struck on the morning of January 5, bringing a temporary end to the earthquakes there. But the swarm returned many times throughout 2022, rattling locals and unnerving local officials that weren’t sure of their source or cause.

According to USGS, a swarm is a sequence of mostly small earthquakes with no identifiable mainshock. “Swarms are usually short-lived, but they can continue for days, weeks, or sometimes even months,” USGS adds. However, the South Carolina event doesn’t fit the typical definition of a swarm since the first event was substantially larger than the rest…

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