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No, the Wasatch Front didn’t just have another earthquake. Here’s what we know.

UPDATED: OCTOBER 27, 2020 AT 2:48 PM
BY
KSLNewsRadio

SALT LAKE CITY– Residents across the Wasatch Front reported feeling a shake and/or a boom on Tuesday, just before lunchtime. 

Utahns from Sandy to Layton felt something no one has been able to confirm yet. Was it an earthquake or aftershock? Routine military drills from Hill Air Force Base? An ammunition explosion? Something caused by the Utah National Guard? 

However, The University of Utah Seismograph Station confirms the shaking was not an earthquake and is consistent with a sonic boom.

A sonic boom is created when shock waves from an object travel faster than the speed of sound. Sonic booms generate a great amount of sound energy, creating a sound similar to a loud boom, explosion or thunderclap to the human ear.   

And it turns out… Hill Air Force Base was probably the cause of the supposed sonic boom. The 388th Fighter Wing says the boom most likely occurred during ariel combat training on the range past the west side of Salt Lake City. 

The sonic boom was caused by pilots traveling at supersonic speeds, which is allowed in certain areas of the range’s airspace. 

 

Did you feel the shake?  

Related: See all of Utah’s quakes with our KSL Earthquake Tracker