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VI.—On some Recent Earthquakes on the Durham Coast and their Probable Cause1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

G. A. Lebour
Affiliation:
Professor of Geology in the Durham College of Science, Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

Extract

Since the latter end of 1883 up to the present time (Sept. 1885) the inhabitants of certain portions of the town of Sunderland have been much disturbed by a series of small but distinctly sensible earth-shakes, which have caused considerable discussion in the local press and elsewhere. These shocks were chiefly felt in that quarter of the town known as the Tunstall Road, but were not absolutely limited to that locality. They were accompanied by rumblings— sometimes dull but often loud—by the rattling of crockery and furniture, and frequently by very distinct shakes of the entire framework of buildings. Often the shocks have, at night, waked up and terrified the sleeping inhabitants.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1885

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References

page 515 note 1 See Trans. N. E. Inst. Min. Eng. vol. xxxii. (1884), where full references to most of the writers who have noticed the breccias are given.