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HILLSDALE, N.J. (AP) — A second small earthquake rattled the New York metropolitan area on Tuesday within several days of ...
Geologist and Rutgers University professor Alexander Gates explaines why New Jersey may be having so many earthquakes.
The recent temblors were classified as “weak,” and may have been connected to a bigger earthquake last year in the area.
The recent, small earthquakes that rattled the New York metro area serve as a reminder that seismic activity does occur in ...
Roughly 60% of the city’s buildings were constructed before 1940, well before the city updated its building codes in 1995 to ...
It’s not clear what is causing the big uptick in earthquakes in the Garden State region, but research suggests a consistent ...
A 2.7-magnitude earthquake struck near Hillsdale, New Jersey, on August 5, shaking parts of the Tri-State area. It follows a ...
New York City’s renters have been shaping local politics since the rent strikes of the early 1900s. A new museum exhibit ...
Residents of the lower Hudson Valley may have reported feeling their second earthquake in four days Tuesday afternoon.
Earthquakes rattled the nation's two largest metropolitan areas Tuesday, sending a jolt across population centers of tens of millions, but thankfully didn't cause any impacts.
According to the NESEC, the largest earthquake centered in New York state happened on September 5, 1944. The magnitude 5.9 ...