A volcanic eruption Saturday in the South Pacific island nation of Tonga was so powerful that its shock wave caused changes in air pressure detected thousands of miles away in Chicago A spike in air pressure readings was first detected at O’Hare Airport between 8:20 and 8:30 a.m. Saturday as the shock wave moved east from the volcano, according to the National Weather Service.

The other side of the shock wave, which moved west from the eruption, circled the globe before reaching the Chicago area early Sunday morning, causing more pressure fluctuations, the weather service said.

“The eruption was so powerful that the waves actually propagated all the way around the globe and then back again,” meteorologist Gino Izzi said.

“The atmosphere acts and behaves like a fluid, so if you were to throw a big rock into a large pool you would see the ripples coming out around where the rock hit the water,” Izzi added. “When the volcano erupted, it was essentially the same thing. There was a massive disturbance that pushed air, just like a rock hitting the pool. The waves rippled out in every direction away from that volcano.”

Izzi said he couldn’t remember the last time a volcanic explosion thousands of miles away was powerful enough to be felt in the Chicago area. “I think it’s been quite some time since we had one that strong,” he said.

Satellite images showed the Saturday undersea eruption, with a plume of ash and steam rising above the water.

A British woman who was missing has been found dead, her family said, in the first reported fatality on Tonga.

A fiber-optic cable that connects the island nation to the rest of the world was likely severed in the explosion, leaving most of the 105,000 Tongans unable to use the internet or make calls abroad. It could take weeks to repair.

Contributing: AP