Another earthquake shakes southern Maine
By Christopher Burns, Bangor Daily News Staff
Another earthquake rattled southern Maine early Wednesday morning, Jan. 29.
The magnitude 2 temblor struck about 3:15 a.m. more than five miles southeast of York Harbor at a depth of six miles, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
That comes after a magnitude 3.8 quake hit just off the coast of York Harbor, rattling homes all across southern Maine. It could be felt as far south as Rhode Island.
Since 1997, there have been more than 150 recorded earthquakes in the state, according to the agency.
The strongest quake in recent memory occurred on Oct. 16, 2012, when a 4.5 magnitude earthquake shook the ground in East Waterboro, according to the Maine Geological Survey. But Maine has felt the impact of much larger earthquakes that hit as far away as Plattsburg, New York, and Quebec City.
Recorded quakes tend to be clustered near Passamaquoddy Bay, the Dover-Foxcroft-Milo area, and southwestern Maine. Of course, earthquakes have been felt across Maine, even as far north as the St. John Valley, according to a Maine Geological Survey report.
Every so often quakes happen in clusters. That happened near Jonesboro between Aug. 11 and Sept. 1, 2022, when about nine earthquakes ranging from magnitude 1.7 to 3 shook the ground. Before that there was the cluster of six quakes east of Cadillac Mountain on Mount Desert Island from Sept. 22 to Dec. 29, 2006, the strongest of which measured a magnitude 4.2.