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Thursday, May 24, 2012 | 10:24 a.m.

Updated: 5:03 p.m. Tuesday, April 29, 2003 | Posted: 6:09 a.m. Tuesday, April 29, 2003

Quake Rattles Metro Atlanta Windows, Nerves

Rare Southern Tremor Felt in Metro Atlanta

FORT PAYNE, Ala. —

A rare earthquake shook parts of the South with a loud roar early Tuesday, cracking foundations, shaking pictures off walls and startling residents from their sleep but causing no serious injuries.

Pakistan-India Earthquake PAKISTAN EARTHQUAKEVideo: Pakistan Relief EffortsVideo: Children Rescued From SchoolSlideshow: Frustration Over Relief High In Pakistan Slideshow: Children Rescued From Collapsed School Interactive: About EarthquakesQuiz: Earthquake TrivaRESOURCESQuake TerminologyNational Earthquake CenterNatural Hazards CenterU.S. Geological SurveyEarthquake Hazards ProgramDONATERed CrossCAREUNICEF The 4.9 magnitude quake, tying the record for Alabama, struck around 4 a.m. CDT and was centered near Fort Payne, Ala., close to the Georgia line, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

It was felt in parts of Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina and Mississippi, according to the USGS.

Georgia emergency officials said they have not heard of any reports of serious damage.

More Resources Video on Demand: Ross Cavitt reports Video on Demand: Deidra Dukes reports from Georgia Tech POLL: Feel it? Vote!

Gov. Sonny Perdue, leaving Atlanta for a fly over of the state, said Tuesday that he had not heard of any reports of damage in Georgia. The governor said he spoke to officials at the Georgia Emergency Management Agency, who were unaware of damage reports.

Others reported only minor traces of the quake.

"We have cracked foundations, a trailer off its foundation, tools off the wall, that kind of thing," said Susan Battles of the DeKalb County emergency management office in Fort Payne.

The quake was accompanied by a loud noise in some areas.

"I sat straight up in my bed," said Lucille Simpson, who works at a store at Fort Payne that had bottles and cans knocked off shelves. "My husband said, `That's a tornado,' but I said `No. That's an earthquake."'

"Everybody else, they thought it was an airplane or a bomb," she said.

Residents of several counties in Tennessee reported hearing a low, rolling sound like thunder, and feeling the quake as a shudder.

Emergency management officials in the Fort Payne area said there were scattered power outages but that most people experienced only minor damage to dishes and pictures knocked off walls.

The same was true in Atlanta, about 160 miles from the epicenter.

"My whole house shook. I could feel the whole wave go north to south," said Barry Goodno, a Georgia Tech structural engineering professor who specializes in earthquakes. "Everything was rattling through the room."

Severe Weather Team 2 Meteorologist Karen Minton, who is from the West Coast, where quakes are more frequent, advised residents to retreat to an interior doorway during an earthquake and go outside once the shaking has stopped.

The quake was felt throughout the metro area from the CNN Center in downtown Atlanta to parts of DeKalb County.

"We have not heard of any damage. It was certainly felt by a large number of people" said John Minsch, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey. "It's not something that happens as frequently in California."

Proof of Minsch's statement was evident in the statements from people who called Channel 2 Action News to share their experiences with the tremor.

"I could hear a rumble but that was it," said Wanda Tenson in Kingston, which is in Bartow County. She said she went outside because a passing train had derailed. "It felt like a wave."

Thomas Hibberts in Ellijay said he had just woken up when his home started to shake.

"I could hear a kind of a rumble and then my home started to shake," he said. "It was like a slow rumble and after the shaking had stopped you could still hear it. It was like a deep rumble.

"It was just a strange way of waking up," Hibberts said.

USGS spokesman Butch Kinerney in Reston, Va. said the last earthquake reported in the region was on Dec. 8, 2001, with a magnitude of 3.9 toward the Huntsville, Ala., area.

"That area between Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia has been subject to a handful of small earthquakes over the last century," Kinerney said.

This quake was unusual for its strength, he said. "At 4.9, you're getting into good shaking territory," Kinerney said, adding that it was followed by six aftershocks that likely were too mild to be felt.

The largest earthquake ever recorded in Alabama was magnitude 4.9 in 1997, centered in Escambia County in the south.

Police answered scores of calls within the first minutes after the tremor.

"I think everybody in Crossville called," said police dispatcher Al Clemons. "I didn't keep count but we have 1,400 people here and I think every one called."

Carolyn Parker of Gadsden said the earthquake woke her up.

"My husband jumped out of bed," she told Channel 2 Action News. "He said he thought it was like the end of the world or something. He ran outside."

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