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Earthquakes in Kansas may refer to: 1867 Manhattan, Kansas earthquake; Oklahoma earthquake swarms (2009–present), including earthquakes in southern Kansas;
Kansas: 5.1 April 24, 1867 1867 Manhattan, Kansas earthquake Kentucky: 7.6–7.9 December 16, 1811 1811–1812 New Madrid earthquakes Louisiana: 4.2 M L: October 19, 1930 [46] Maine: 5.9 March 21, 1904 [47] Maryland: 5.8 August 23, 2011 2011 Virginia earthquake Massachusetts: 5.9 November 18, 1755 1755 Cape Ann earthquake Michigan: 4.6 M L ...
The 1867 Manhattan earthquake struck Riley County, Kansas, in the United States on April 24, 1867, at 20:22 UTC, or about 14:30 local time.The strongest earthquake to originate in the state, it measured 5.1 on a seismic scale that is based on an isoseismal map or the event's felt area.
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Kansas City Chiefs owner Clark Hunt and his family (from left), daughters Ava and Gracie, and wife, Tavia, vacationed in Iceland after the Chiefs played in Germany and right before earthquakes in ...
Throughout the year, earthquakes killed 584 people, making 2024 the least deadliest year for earthquakes since 2020. The vast majority of the year's fatalities were attributed to a M w 7.5 earthquake that struck the west coast of Honshu in Japan immediately after 2024 began, which was also the strongest event of the year and the deadliest in ...
Aftershocks continued Friday after a strong earthquake that prompted a tsunami warning for parts of the U.S. West Coast Thursday. "At this time, there have been 59 earthquakes of magnitude three ...
Kansas is not particularly earthquake prone, ranking 45th out of 50 states by damage caused. [2] However, the north-central part of the state, particularly Riley and Pottawatomie counties, is the most prone to earthquakes. The Humboldt Fault had the largest earthquake in Kansas history with the 1867 Manhattan, Kansas earthquake.