Since an earthquake rattled central Virginia and the East Coast nearly two years ago, more than 450 aftershocks have been recorded by the U.S. Geological Survey.
The latest occurred Wednesday when a magnitude-2.3 quake struck about 6 miles south-southwest of Louisa. The survey says the area is within the central Virginia seismic zone, which has been identified for decades as an area of elevated earthquake risk.
The magnitude-5.8 earthquake that rocked the East Coast in August 2011 startled tens of millions of people as for north as Canada and damaged schools and houses in the Virginia epicenter.
The USGS says up to one-third of the U.S. population could have felt the quake – more than any other in U.S. history.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.

NYC Sues Delivery App Over Lost Pay in New Mamdani Crackdown
Palantir Poaching Suit Called ‘Scare’ Tactic by Ex-Employees
The Return Period for An LA Wildfire-Scale Event May Be Shorter Than You Think
What The Return of California’s ‘Death Discount’ Means for Litigation