M5.5 earthquake: A bump in the night toward more typical seismic background

Map of selected earthquakes beneath a portion of southeast Hawaii from May 4, 2018 to March 14, 2019, showing principally aftershocks following May 4, 2018, M6.9 earthquake. Black dots indicate epicenters of 13,083 earthquakes located during this time interval; yellow stars show locations of the M6.9 earthquake and the March 13, 2019, M5.5 earthquake. (U S Geological Survey, Hawaiian Volcano Observatory/Courtesy Photo)

VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK — Early Wednesday morning, just before 1 a.m., houses in East Hawaii began to shake. Without a doubt, it was an earthquake. To those who endured the near-daily shaking from last summer’s collapse events at Kilauea’s summit, this week’s earthquake was clearly different.