East Coast Earthquake, One Year Later

East Coast Earthquake, One Year Later lead image
(Inside Science) -- One year after a 5.8 magnitude earthquake hit Louisa County, Virginia, shaking most of the U.S. East Coast, aftershocks are still being felt -- at least across the landscape of the news media.
On LiveScience
Hank Silverberg at WTOP.com
But the most common theme running across the anniversary coverage in the news seems to be the question “Could this happen again?”
Michael Blanpied, associate coordinator of the USGS’s earthquake hazards program, said during a podcast from the U.S. Geological Survey that “the trouble with eastern U.S. earthquakes is they don’t happen very often, and sometimes the faults on which they happen haven’t had an earthquake for a very long time. Our trick is to figure out which one of those faults -- one of those many, buried, not very well-understood faults -- had an earthquake on it, back in August.”
So one year later, things are pretty much back to normal across the Washington, D.C.-region, except for the Washington Monument -- which remains closed while crews continue repairs to fix cracks caused by last year’s quake -- and ongoing repairs to the National Cathedral to fix the many damaged buttresses and adorning gargoyles.