Taylor Swift, an accomplished musician who recently reached Spotify's Billions Club for the fourth time, is adored by her fans, who have caused seismic activity known as Swift Quakes.
According to CNN, the singer's Eras Tour concerts at Seattle's Lumen Field on 22 and 23 July had record attendance, and the concertgoers' dancing created seismic activity comparable to a 2.3 magnitude earthquake.
According to People magazine, the Swift Quakes were discovered by a geology professor at Western Washington University.
"After comparing the data from both nights of the concert, I clearly saw the same pattern of signals and when overlayed on top of each other, they appeared to be identical," the professor stated.
Caplan-Auerbach mentioned that there were Beast Quakes in 2011 when the Seattle Seahawks went crazy after Marshawn Lynch's spectacular touchdown against the New Orleans Saints in the NFC playoff game.
Swift Quakes, she claimed, generated double the shaking as Beast Quakes.
The lecturer went on to say that the key difference between Beast and Swiftie quakes is that shaking at a concert lasts longer than cheering after a score in an NFL game.
Caplan-Auerbach stated that she recorded over ten hours of data from the event, and that the music, people, speakers, and beat generate energy that may push through and shake the earth.