Thursday, March 15, 2018

HISTORICAL ACCOUNT;NOT ALL CONCLUSIVE LIST OF LARGE BRITISH ISLE EARTHQUAKES

List of earthquakes in the British Isles

The following is a list of notable earthquakes that have been detected in the British Isles. On average, several hundred earthquakes are detected by the British Geological Survey each year, but almost all are far too faint to be felt by humans. Those that are felt generally cause very little damage. Nonetheless, earthquakes have on occasion resulted in considerable damage, most notably in 1580 and 1884; Musson (2003) reports that there have been ten documented fatalities – six caused by falling masonry and four by building collapse. The causes of earthquakes in the UK are unclear, but may include "regional compression caused by motion of the Earth’s tectonic plates, and uplift resulting from the melting of the ice sheets that covered many parts of Britain thousands of years ago."[1] Medieval reports of "earthquakes" that threw down newly-built cathedrals may simply have been catastrophic failure of overloaded masonry, particularly towers, rather than actual tectonic events.

EarthquakesEdit

DateLocationIntensityM_LCommentsSource
15 April 1185Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England~VIIILincoln Cathedral badly damaged.[2]
13 February 1247South Wales to London, England~>5.5Felt in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland[3][2]
21 December 1248South West EnglandVII-VIIIWells Cathedral reported to have been badly damaged[2]
11 September 1275South Wales to Southern England>VII~6.0In Glastonbury, the Abbey was damaged and the Church of St. Michael on the Torr Hill destroyed, as was the priory church on St Michael's Mount in Cornwall. "Only contemporary report of earthquake fatalities before 1580"[2][4][5]
21 May 1382Strait of Dover, EnglandVII-VIII>5.5The bell tower of the cathedral was "severely damaged" and the six bells "shook down". Cloister walls to the Canterbury dormitory were ruined. In Kent, All Saints Church, West Stourmouth, was badly damaged. Felt in London (MMVI) and lent its name to the "Earthquake Synod". See 1382 Dover Straits earthquake[2]
6 April 1580Strait of Dover, England~5.8First recorded fatality. See Dover Straits earthquake of 1580[2]
8 September 1692Duchy of Brabant, Belgium~6.0Felt in most parts of England, France, Germany and the Netherlands[6][7]
23 October 1839Comrie, Perth and Kinross, Scotland~4.8Part of a long-lived earthquake swarm. This was the largest of all known Comrie earthquakes, and was felt over most of Scotland. It caused a dam near Stirling to breach.[2]
28 November 1880Argyll, Argyll and Bute, Scotland~5.2Largest recorded earthquake in Scotland.[2]
22 April 1884Colchester, Essex, EnglandVIII~4.6The most damaging earthquake since 1580. At least two fatalities reported. Felt in France and Belgium. See 1884 Colchester earthquake.[2]
27 June 1906Swansea, WalesVII5.2One of the most damaging British earthquakes of the 20th century.[2][8]
7 June 1931Dogger Bank, North SeaVI6.1Strongest recorded instrumentally. See 1931 Dogger Bank earthquake.[2]
11 February 1957Derby, Derbyshire, England5.3Felt across central England. Largest UK post-war earthquake until 1984, and one of the most damaging earthquakes of the twentieth century.[2]
19 July 1984Llลทn Peninsula, Gwynedd, WalesVII5.4Felt across Ireland and western Great Britain. See 1984 Llลทn Peninsula earthquake.[2]
27 February 2008Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, EnglandVI5.2Felt widely in England and Wales. See 2008 England earthquake.[9]

References

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