MGN

A magnitude 5.1 earthquake rattled parts of four states Sunday morning. It struck near Sparta, North Carolina  around 8:00 am. Sparta is near the Virginia line about 80 miles southwest of Roanoke.

Initial reports indicate little to no damage. No injuries have been reported.

People report feeling the effects of the earthquake in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee.

Magnitude 5.1 is at the low end of earthquakes considered “moderate”. At 5.1, such tremors are often felt but rarely cause significant damage.

SPARTA, N.C. (AP) — Officials say an earthquake – the strongest in more than 100 years – shook much of North Carolina early Sunday, rattling homes, buildings and residents.

The National Weather Service in Greenville said the 5.1-magnitude temblor struck at 8:07 a.m., following a much smaller quake several hours earlier.

There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.

Karen Backer was in her Greensboro apartment when she heard initially mistook banging in her kitchen for her roommate.

“Nope, it was the cabinet doors ‘clinking’ open and closed! My neighbors on the other hand said they felt our apartment building shaking,” Backer said. “Well, sadly, nothing surprises me in 2020, but a hurricane and an earthquake in the same week is crazy.”

It was the largest earthquake to hit the state since 1916, when a magnitude 5.5 quake occurred near Skyland, the weather service said.

The U.S. Geological Service said the quake’s epicenter was about 2.5 miles (four kilometers) southeast of Sparta, just south of the Virginia-North Carolina border. The USGS said the population in the affected region resides in structures “that are resistant to earthquake shaking, though vulnerable structures exist.”