Residents reported “rumbling” and rattling windows and doors after a 3.3 magnitude earthquake hit Staffordshire on Wednesday evening.
The British Geological Survey (BGS) said the tremor’s epicentre was 7.3km (4.5 miles) below Tean.
It is the largest of 21 earthquakes to strike the UK in the past two months.
The BGS said people had reported “an initial rumbling, then a bang” with what “felt more like a shunt, like something had hit something”.
People as far as 20km (12.5 miles) from the epicentre took to social media to describe the effects.
Kelvin Evans, in Upper Tean, said he heard a “very loud, weird, spooky noise, that seemed to vibrate the front of the house.”
Another Tean resident, Jenni Brown, said she thought a vehicle had veered off the road and bumped the side of her house.
‘A very large shake’
Carol Heather, from Hilderstone, said she felt an impact and noise so loud she thought it was a bomb.
“My hair stood on end, I was jolted out of my seat. I was just watching a film and it was really frightening, terrifying. It was such a bang.”
Mark Begg, 30, said he was at home in Uttoxeter when he felt “a very large shake”.
After checking the house and finding no signs of damage he concluded “it was most likely a mini-earthquake”.
Tom, 38, in Cheadle said: “I was sitting watching an episode of Only Connect with my wife on YouTube and as we opened another bottle of wine the whole house shook.
“I thought either one of the children had fallen out of bed or something else had happened.”
Several people in Derbyshire also reported feeling the quake.
Dr Ian Stimpson, a senior lecturer in geophysics at Keele University, said the area had not historically been hit by earth tremors.
“With this location and depth it is likely to be a natural earthquake rather than anything to do with former mines,” he added.
The BGS records and locates between 200 and 300 earthquakes in the UK each year with the majority only detected by sensitive instruments.
The strongest UK earthquake recorded by the survey was a 6.1 magnitude tremor in the North Sea, about 75 miles from Great Yarmouth, in June 1931.
Source: BBC