Donna Lindstrom was lying in bed and looking at her phone Wednesday morning when she heard a loud bang that rattled her 19th-century house in the central Connecticut town of East Hampton.
Soon, the 66-year-old retired delivery driver and dozens of other town residents were on social media, discussing the latest occurrence of strange explosive sounds and rumblings known for hundreds of years as the āMoodus Noises.ā
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āIt was like a sonic boom,ā Lindstrom said. āIt was a real short jolt and loud. It felt deep, deep, deep.ā
It was indeed a tiny earthquake with a magnitude of 1.7, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Robert Thorson, an earth sciences professor at the University of Connecticut, said booms, rumblings and rattling have been recorded in the East Hampton area, including the nearby village of Moodus, for centuries, dating back well before a larger earthquake, recorded on May 16, 1791, knocked down stone walls and chimneys.
In fact, Moodus is short for āMachimoodusā or āMackimoodus,ā which means āplace of bad noisesā in the Algonquian dialects once spoken in the area. A local high school has even nicknamed their teams āThe Noises,ā in honor of that history.
The occurrences were frequent enough that the federal government, worried about the possible effect of seismic activity on the nearby, now-decommissioned Haddam Neck Nuclear Power Plant, conducted a study of the āMoodus Noisesā in the late 1980s, Thorson said.
What they found was that the noises were the result of small but unusually shallow seismic displacements within an unusually strong and brittle crust, where the sound is amplified by rock fractures and topography, he said.
āThere is something about Moodus that is tectonic that is creating these noises there,ā Thorson said. āAnd then there is something acoustic that is amplifying or modifying the noises and we donāt really have a good answer for the cause of either.ā
Thorson said there could be a series of underground fractures or hollows in the area that help amplify the sounds made by pressure on the crust.
āThatās going to create crunching noises,ā he said. āYou know what this is like when you hear ice cubes break.ā
It doesnāt mean the area is in danger of a big quake, he said.
āRift faults that we used to have here (millions of years ago) are gone,ā he said. āWe replaced that with a compressional stress.ā
That stress, he said, has led to the crunching and occasional bangs and small quakes associated with the āMoodus Noises.ā
āItās just something we all have to live with,ā said Lindstrom. āIām just glad I donāt live in California.ā