An Earthquake Struck South Of Montreal This Morning But Everyone Thought It Was A Snowplow

- An earthquake struck just south of Montreal early this morning.
- Over 400 people have reported feeling it, though many weren't sure right away.
- In fact, tons of people are admitting they thought it was a snowplow!
- Visit MTLBlog for more headlines.
Were you woken up by some strange rumbling this morning? If so, you weren't imagining anything and it wasn't a parade of snowplows, either. An earthquake actually struck just south of Montreal this morning and tons of people have taken to twitter to ask the same question...
"Was that an earthquake?"
And it was. It struck just before 6 a.m. this morning and Earthquakes Canada is reporting that was a 4.0 magnitude, down from an original report of 4.2.ย
The earthquake occurred in the Salaberry-de-Valleyfield region, but was felt in Saint Bruno, Vaudreuil and some parts of Montreal.
Earthquakes Canada also explains that "there are no reports of damage, and none would be expected," considering the low magnitude of the quake.ย
But even with a low magnitude, over 400 people have officially reported feeling the seismic event this morning, even as far north as Saint-Saveur and Mont-Tremblant, as far east as Cornwall, Ontario and as far south as Plattsburgh, NY.
The best part, though, aside from no one being hurt and no damage being reported, is the fact that nearly everyone who has taken to Twitter admits... they totally thought it was just a snowplow at first.
Below is the final tweet that Earthquakes Canada sent out this morning, confirming the quake, its time and location, as well as the magnitude.
2020/01/13 at 05:38am EST M 4.0 - near Huntingdon, QC region, REVISEDโ Earthquakes Canada (@Earthquakes Canada) 1578928639.0
[rebelmouse-image 26887416 alt="An Earthquake Struck South Of Montreal This Morning & People's Reactions Were Priceless" photo_credit="Earthquakes Canada" expand=1 original_size="449x467"] Earthquakes Canada
This map shows precisely where the seismic activity began, which you can find along with the rest of the data surrounding the quake on the Earthquakes Canada page here.
READ ALSO: Quebec's Charlevoix Region Is The "Most Seismically Active" Area Of Eastern Canada
People quickly took to Twitter to confirm that what they had just felt was actually an earthquake.
Anyone feel that earthquake this morning ???!โ Alexikins (@Alexikins) 1578918292.0
Considering the early timing of the quake (5:37 a.m.) I'm surprised it was strong enough to wake anyone. I live in Cote-des-Neiges, where many people reported feeling the quake, but I felt nothing.
(Must've been the NyQuil...)
But for those who did feel it, it seems the general consensus was the question, "Was that a quake or a snowplow?!"
When snow removal goes by our building shakes and this morning it was shaking but longer than it takes for a truckโฆ https://t.co/JsxWxcckehโ lady rachael ๐ป (@lady rachael ๐ป) 1578917916.0
So that WAS an earthquake I felt! I thought it might be snow clearing vehicles #earthquakeโ Anna Asimakopulos (@Anna Asimakopulos) 1578912868.0
Which just feels like the most Canadian response to an earthquake I have ever heard in my life.
So I heard something strange this morning, like a huge truck scraping pavement but there wasn't anything outside. Mโฆ https://t.co/D9hhcrtQg5โ The DogueMother (@The DogueMother) 1578921057.0
#Montreal at 5:30 am #mtl #earthquake https://t.co/zuCqpRPEjWโ What The Frame Comics (@What The Frame Comics) 1578912735.0
@AndrewPeplowski #Montreal #Earthquake https://t.co/OookhE0DDgโ Craig / APACHE ๐จ๐ฆ๐ฎ (twitch.tv/apache_n4sir) (@Craig / APACHE ๐จ๐ฆ๐ฎ (twitch.tv/apache_n4sir)) 1578916149.0
We're lucky that most of the quakes that happen in our region aren't much more than the soft rumbling that many felt this morning.
So let's be thankful for that. Particularly on a day when so many are remembering the devastation of the historic earthquake in Haiti this time 10 years ago.