Loud explosion in North Hollywood still a mystery, police say
The
loud explosion that jolted North Hollywood on Tuesday night remained
a mystery the next morning, authorities said. An officer at the Los
Angeles Police Department’s North Hollywood station said police
searched the area for a half an hour Tuesday night but had no luck in
determining what caused the sound. The officer said police received
numerous calls about the noise. At about 9:30 p.m., numerous people
began tweeting about a loud explosion. Some thought it had come from
a North Hollywood Metro station; others reported hearing an explosion
in Studio City. “Mysterious explosion a few minutes ago. What’s
going on? #LA” tweeted @ThatVitalSpark. “Seriously, any leads
what the hell this boom was in North Hollywood? Im shook up a bit”
tweeted @RajRawal37. A Reddit user posed the question: “What just
blew up in North Hollywood?” By 10:30 p.m., there were more than
120 comments, but no crowd-sourced answer. However, possibilities
ranging from alien invasions to meteors were proposed.
Salem
and Marblehead police officers searched the area of Ocean Avenue
early Saturday morning for evidence of what could have caused the
large boom that prompted residents across the area to call 911.
According to Sunday morning’s Salem police log, At 1:34 a.m.,
police received multiple calls regarding a “loud bang” on Ocean
Avenue. They were unable to locate the source. Many of our readers in
Marblehead also reported hearing the sound, which has some town
residents wondering whether or not it is coming from the harbor. This
isn’t the first time we’ve written about mysterious explosion
noises being reported in the area late at night. Theories offered so
far have included youngsters with powerful fireworks, cannons from
boats in the harbor, malfunctioning electrical transformers, UFOs and
the shifting of tectonic plates under the city.
Residents of Red Bank in Lexington County appear to have gotten a
loud awakening Thursday morning as multiple reports indicate a loud
booming noise in the area. WIS News 10 viewers poured onto our
Facebook page this morning to report the sound. “What was the
horrific boom in the Redbank area,” asked Lisa Russell Fields.
“People are saying it sounded like a plane crash or explosion. I
also heard the ‘big
boom’
this morning. So did a lot of other people, it sounds like a close
cannon or something and will shake the whole building/house,” said
Jennifer Lee Stokes Kleine. “Does anyone have a concrete
explanation for the loud boom that shook houses in Lexington County
around the Redbank/YMCA/Old Barnwell Road area this morning around
8:30 a.m.,” said Mary Frances Henry Bell. So, what was it? The
Lexington County Sheriff’s Department doesn’t know either. “Law
enforcement officers and public safety personnel have been unable so
far to determine the source of the noise,” said Sheriff’s
Department spokesman Maj. John Allard. “No explosions have been
reported.” A similarly loud explosive noise happened last year in
the South Congaree portion of Lexington County. Residents reported
then being woken up to the boom around 8 a.m. on a Sunday.
Seismographs at the University of South Carolina even measured
something in the area. However, there was never a determined cause
for that loud noise either.
Hundreds
of people from Weber County to Utah County, and some as far north as
Rock Springs, Wyoming reported that they felt shaking or heard loud
booms Tuesday night around 9 p.m. The FOX 13 Newsroom received
several calls from concerned citizens about the phenomena shortly
after 9 p.m., but the cause remains a mystery. Representatives for
the University of Utah’s Seismograph stations said there was not an
earthquake, ATK said they were not conducting any rocket tests, the
Utah National Guard said they were not conducting any weapons or
artillery training and Hill Air Force Base said they did not have any
planes in the air after 6 p.m. A map of earthquakes over the last day
shows no activity in Northern Utah, or anywhere in the state. The
closest quake was a relatively small 2.6 magnitude near Bishop,
Calif., more than 500 miles from Salt Lake City. The equipment at the
University of Utah Seismograph stations did, however, record “sonic
activity” at the time people said they were hearing the booms, but
the cause of the sonic activity has not been identified. There is
also a theory that the heavy inversion layer may have amplified a
blast on the ground or in the air, making it seem closer and louder
than reality. While that is possible, it is still unclear what caused
the noise.
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