The quake hit at around 6:30 p.m. about 136 miles east of Ocean City. The epicenter was located in the Atlantic Ocean, the agency said.
It had a depth of 6 miles (10 kilometers) the agency said.
A few dozen people reported feeling the quake around Maryland and Virginia after it hit. People in Virginia Beach and Ocean Pines, namely, felt the tremor, CBS reported.
The town of Ocean City issued a statement about the matter.
And that is why, she said, earthquakes tend to be felt from longer distances than those that occur off the West Coast of the United States.
Pursley said it is unlikely the 4.7 magnitude quake did any damage. By the time the seismic waves traveled through the water to land, the shaking had weakened, she said.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said at 7:30 a.m. on Jan. 16, that it didn’t report any tsunami activity associated with the earthquake, according to the report.
The last significant earthquake in the area was Nov. 30, 2017, when a 4.1 magnitude tremor it about 10 miles from Dover, Delaware.
In 2011, a 5.8 magnitude quake struck the Delmarva Peninsula and the East Coast.
That quake, according to reports at the time, hit Washington D.C. and was felt in New York City.
West Coast vs East Coast Earthquakes
The USGS says on its website that the 2011 earthquake in Virginia was felt at more than twice the distance than a similar-sized one that hit CaliforniaThe 5.8 quake was felt as many as 600 miles away and was felt by “tens of millions of people in the eastern United States and southeastern Canada,” the agency says.
It adds: “For comparison, a magnitude 6.0 earthquake in 2014 in Napa, California, was felt only as far as 250 miles from the epicenter. Despite the Napa earthquake releasing about twice as much energy as the Virginia earthquake and causing much more damage near the epicenter, it wasn’t felt nearly as far away.”