An earthquake struck Britain in the early hours of this morning as locals reported hearing a ‘thunder’-like noise and household items shaking.
The 2.5-magnitude quake struck off the coast of Silverdale, Lancashire at 5.03am.
The tremors originated 2.6km below the earth’s surface and was felt by residents in Morecambe Bay.
According to the British Geological Society (BGS), locals reported feeling a ‘sharp shaking jolt’ and heard a ‘thunder noise’.
Others said that the radiators and pictures in their homes ‘rattled’ with the force.
The quake was reportedly felt as far away as Blackpool and Flookburgh.
It comes just two weeks after a larger earthquake was felt in the same region on December 4.
That event, which measured at magnitude 3.3 on the Richter scale, struck at 11.23pm.
Residents across the South Lakes and Lancashire were affected, as well as towns Kendal and Ulverston, in Cumbria.
Locals said that quake ‘felt like an explosion’ with some saying their entire homes seemed to shake.
Earthquakes are measured using the Richter scale, which generally records seismic movements between one and ten.
Most modern quakes measure between three and seven, with those at six or higher generally considered life-threatening.
The largest ever earthquake recorded was the Great Chilean quake of 1960, which came in at 9.5.
It was said to have killed 1,655 people and displaced a further two million.
The biggest UK quake on record occurred 60 miles off the coast of Yorkshire in 1931, and measured 6.1 on the Richter scale.
A woman in Hull reportedly died of a heart attack as a result, while a non-destructive tsunami wave was said to have hit the east coast.
More recently, a 5.2 magnitude quake hit around 2.5 miles north of Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, in 2008.
People across England reported feeling the 10-second tremor shortly before 1am on February 27.



