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'Vardyquake' hits King Power

Boisterous
Last Updated 09 May 2016, 19:44 IST

Boisterous fans at Leicester City’s final home game of the season caused “the biggest” tremors recorded at the ground, literally making the earth move.

A University of Leicester team which installed a seismometer near the King Power Stadium reported two minor quakes with a magnitude of 0.4 on Saturday night.

Known as Vardyquakes, the tremors have been attributed to sudden energy releases made by Foxes fans.

Goals by both Jamie Vardy and Andy King notched up quakes of 0.4 magnitude, the BBC reported on Monday.

“The fans must have been truly energised for their team to end the league on a high and we can see this with the seismic waves they produced,” said research team member Richard Hoyle.

“The signals we measured at Saturday’s game were the biggest we have seen coming from the King Power Stadium since we started monitoring the matches.”

He added: “If we collate all of the data from previous matches, out of all the Leicester City Football Club goal scorers, Vardy is responsible for generating the most seismic activity since the project started - so perhaps there really is such a phenomenon as the Vardyquake!”
Until the game against Everton, the biggest reading was when Leonardo Ulloa scored a last-minute winner against Norwich, in February. It registered a magnitude of 0.3.

A seismometer was installed by geology students, and the British Geological Survey (BGS), at Hazel Community Primary School, 500 metres from the stadium, as part of a project to detect earthquakes around the world.

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(Published 09 May 2016, 19:44 IST)

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