Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Cause Of Earthquakes That Shook A New Brunswick Village For Months Is A Mystery

The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2016 01:00 PM
    MCADAM, N.B. — The cause of more than 100 earthquakes that shook homes and rattled nerves in a New Brunswick village earlier this year may remain a mystery, says a seismologist.
     
    Stephen Halchuk at Earthquakes Canada said the kind of earthquake swarm that began rumbling under the village of McAdam in February is unusual but not unheard of.
     
    "There have been other swarms of activity in eastern North America. There have been ones in Maine and in Connecticut and some further to the west as well," he said.
     
    "It still remains a mystery as to why this particular area is generating them. It just appears to be a zone of weakness in the earth's crust. There's not a well defined fault that we can point to and say that's what's causing it."
     
    A 3.3 magnitude quake on Feb. 9 shook homes and broke windows. Some people said the tremors sounded like explosions.
     
    "It was a fairly tight cluster, only a few kilometres across, and unfortunately for the people of McAdam it was almost right under the village itself," Halchuk said.
     
    He said if the earthquakes had happened five or 10 kilometres away, it would have been unlikely that people would have noticed them.
     
    The McAdam area experienced a succession of earthquakes in the days before and after the 3.3 magnitude event.
     
    They were stronger than earthquakes previously felt in 2012 and 2015.
     
    "We got good recordings of more than about 100 of these tiny events. They have since died off, and we haven't recorded anything in the vicinity of McAdam for a couple of months now. The last one was in June," he said.  
     
    Halchuk said he and his colleagues are writing a paper on the McAdam events that will be published later this year in a scientific journal.  
     
    He says there's no way to know when, or if, McAdam will get another cluster of quakes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Announces $119 M In Funding For Nova Scotia

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Announces $119 M In Funding For Nova Scotia
    BRIDGETOWN, N.S. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced $119 million in federal funding for wastewater and public transit projects in Nova Scotia.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Announces $119 M In Funding For Nova Scotia

    Provincial Police Say Would-be Terrorist Aaron Driver Died Of A Gunshot Wound

    Provincial Police Say Would-be Terrorist Aaron Driver Died Of A Gunshot Wound
    Police say a terrorist sympathizer killed in a high-stakes standoff in southwestern Ontario last week died from a gunshot wound.

    Provincial Police Say Would-be Terrorist Aaron Driver Died Of A Gunshot Wound

    Alberta Government To Ban Spear Hunting After Online Bear Video Sparks Outrage

    Alberta Government To Ban Spear Hunting After Online Bear Video Sparks Outrage
    The video posted in June on the YouTube account of Josh Bowmar, who runs an Ohio-based fitness company with his wife, set off a deluge of outrage before it was made private.

    Alberta Government To Ban Spear Hunting After Online Bear Video Sparks Outrage

    Info Request Reveals BC Hydro Concerns Over Impact Of Fracking On Dams

    Critics have slammed fracking as a poorly understood and risky industrial activity that contributes to increased seismic activity and risks contaminating nearby aquifers.

    Info Request Reveals BC Hydro Concerns Over Impact Of Fracking On Dams

    'A Bunch Of Losers:' Jason Kenney Condemns Tweet With Notley In Crosshairs

    CALGARY — Conservative MP Jason Kenney says a negative tweet featuring Alberta Premier Rachel Notley's face sitting inside the crosshairs of a scope came from an attention-seeking loser.

    'A Bunch Of Losers:' Jason Kenney Condemns Tweet With Notley In Crosshairs

    Former Agriculture Minister Pat Pimm Leaves B.C. Liberals Over 'Allegations'

    FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — A member of the B.C. legislature says he is leaving the governing Liberal caucus over unspecified allegations.

    Former Agriculture Minister Pat Pimm Leaves B.C. Liberals Over 'Allegations'