海角大神

Mysterious booms shake Washington state community

Two mysterious booms shook the homes of residents in Port Angeles, Wash. But this isn't the first time this town has heard booms in the night. 

A bald eagle looks out over the Strait of Juan de Fuca at the Salt Creek Recreation Area in Port Angeles, Wash. on July 15, 2013. Residents reported mysterious booms coming from the Strait on Wednesday.

AP Photo / Kitsap Sun, Meegan M. Reid)

February 28, 2015

A couple of mysterious booms Wednesday that rattled residents of the Port Angeles area seemed to be coming from the Strait of Juan de Fuca, but the cause remains undetermined.

checked with the Clallam County sheriff's office, the Coast Guard, Navy, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Canadian Forces and the Weather Service, and no one could account for Wednesday's unusual sounds.

One resident, Michelle Kaake, heard two booms at her home. The first vibrated the floor and rattled the windows. She heard another one about five minutes later.

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The newspaper reports that loud booms have been reported occasionally on the north end of the Olympic Peninsula for the past nine years without explanation.

Shallow earthquakes can cause loud booms, according to the U.S. Geological Survey website.聽鈥淣o one knows for sure, but scientists speculate that these 'booms' are probably small shallow earthquakes that are too small to be recorded,鈥 the USGS website said.
But no earthquakes were recorded in the Clallam County area Wednesday, according to USGS seismic data

In 2012, a series of聽mysterious and disconcerting overnight booms and vibrations that kept Clintonville, Wisc. residents awake for three consecutive nights.

鈥淭he cracks in my floor, the cracks in my wall are getting worse,鈥 Sharon Binger said Wednesday night at a town hall meeting held at a local high school that attracted about 400 residents. The booms are powerful enough to rattle dishes, say some, while others describe the sounds as underground fireworks, reported 海角大神.

that the mysterious booms that shook the town were the result of a 1.5-magnitude earthquake. Although not a huge event, the earthquake caused a swarm of several small quakes in a short time. Paul Caruso, a geophysicist from the USGS, told the local Fox News affiliate that most people wouldn't normally feel a 1.5-magnitude earthquake, but that the rock in Wisconsin is very old and well consolidated, allowing residents to feel otherwise sensitive rumblings.

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that聽"mysteriously loud noises have been reported for hundreds of years across the world. In Italian they are called 鈥渂rontidi鈥 (thunder-like); in Bangladesh they are 鈥淏arisal guns鈥. US citizens call them 鈥渟kyquakes鈥, 鈥渕oodus noises鈥 and in North and South Carolina, 鈥淪eneca guns." "

In , scientist emeritus of the U.S. Geological Survey, explored some of the possible causes of the booms heard in various locations worldwide. Among the more plausible scientific are "mud volcanoes and/or explosive venting of gas; tsunamis or large, storm-driven waves; meteors; booming sands; rock bursts; local earthquakes; and distant thunder. The latter are the best documented and best understood natural sources of booming sounds. Linking the sound to the source can be challenging for a variety of reasons. Under appropriate wind conditions and atmospheric thermal (density) profiles, for example, the low-frequency component of a boom can propagate as a guided wave for distances significantly beyond the visible range of the source."