The earthquake was felt sharply in
New England, though the date recorded for the event was 26 January 1663, as New England was using the
Julian calendar at the time. A church record entry made by Reverend S. Danforth from
Roxbury, Massachusetts (~600 km from the CSZ) indicated the initial shock was felt around 6 pm that evening and several more shocks followed the next morning. On the shores of
Massachusetts Bay, the tops of chimneys were broken on houses and
pewter (a malleable metal alloy) was jarred from shelves. Using this MMI value and the distance from the epicenter one can estimate the magnitude of the earthquake using published intensity-attenuation relations. In a June 2011 report on the earthquake that was published in the
Bulletin of the
Seismological Society of America, John E. Ebel, a professor and researcher at
Boston College, used these known relations that apply to earthquakes in northeastern North America and determined the magnitude to be 7.3–7.9. Great landslides along the Saint Lawrence, Saint-Maurice, and
Batiscan Rivers made these rivers muddy after the shock, with the waters of the St. Lawrence being affected for up to one month. Near
Trois-Rivières several waterfalls were transformed by these landslides,
Multibeam bathymetry data and high-resolution
seismic reflection data acquired in the
Saguenay Fjord has been used to identify a series of landslide deposits that were probably triggered by the 1663 earthquake. The Saguenay region is the site of a geological
graben and has been subject to several natural disasters since the turn of the seventeenth century. In 1996 it was the site of the
largest flood in 20th-century Canadian history, which led to the investigation of the fjord bottom using bathymetric data to determine slope stability. ==Historical records==