Metro Detroit shakes from 3.6 earthquake in Amherstburg Canada

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A 3.6 magnitude earthquake centered in Canada shook metro Detroit Thursday night. 

The event happened at about 8:01 p.m. Thursday, leaving many residents in SE Michigan wondering what happened. The United States Geological Survey posted that the epicenter was Amherstburg, Ontario, a town of about 21,900 people in Canada.

FOX 2 viewer Tonya Spears said in Harper Woods she was watching TV when it hit.

"I was startled, the  floors started shaking, it sounded like a train or I thought my furnace was about to blow up," she wrote in an email.  "Then dogs next door started barking like crazy - then it was gone."

Viewer Bill Tsikaris wrote in saying the rumble was strong in Dearborn and Downriver.

"All Downriver communities just felt a large band and rumble that lasted for 15 seconds or so, stretching from Grosse Ille to Dearborn," he wrote in an email.

If you have any footage from the earthquake, please share it with us on our Facebook page or by emailing us at fox2newsdesk@foxtv.com.

FOR USGS INFO CLICK HERE: earthquake.usgs.gov/