In one week, eight earthquakes between magnitudes 1.4 to 2.5 hit the Western North Carolina region, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
A town called Cherokee in the western part of North Carolina experienced six tremors in five days last week.
With back-to-back earthquakes having recently hit California, it’s important to be prepared. Here are the best ways to prepare for when the next earthquake hits, according to experts.
The strongest earthquake was a magnitude 2.5 around 11 p.m. EDT Wednesday approximately 2.5 miles southwest of Cherokee.
Three of the quakes were within hours of each other on Wednesday night, and they were nearby one another. The first one was a 2.3-magnitude earthquake at 8:13 p.m. EDT near Cherokee, North Carolina.
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Four hours later, at 11:03 p.m. EDT, a magnitude 2.5 earthquake struck approximately two and a half miles away.
The third earthquake with a magnitude of 2.1 hit a few minutes later, at 11:14 p.m. EDT. The quake was almost at surface level, according to the USGS.

Five of the earthquakes near Cherokee, North Carolina were in close to proximity to each other.
Two more recent quakes struck closer to central North Carolina, near Greensboro.
Most of the quakes happened between three and four miles in depth below the surface. WFMY News reported people felt their house shake and heard a loud "boom" that sounded like an explosion in the 2.3-magnitude earthquake that hit in between Arcadia and Advance. Others felt the quake as far away as Winston-Salem.
There were no reports of injuries or damage.
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