CHILTON COUNTY, Al.
 A review of air traffic records by the  Federal Aviation Administration today found no records of any flights  Tuesday afternoon that could have caused a sonic boom in central  Alabama.
Some have speculated that a sonic boom could have been the cause of the loud sound that rattled walls across Chilton County and in parts of Bibb County Tuesday afternoon.
More than 100 calls about the incident were received by Chilton County 911 about 4:30 p.m. Tuesday.
FAA  spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said if there was a sonic boom, it would  have had to have been caused by a military aircraft because no civilian  plane flies fast enough to cause one.
A spokesman for  Maxwell-Gunter Air Force Base in Montgomery said none of the aircraft  that fly out of there travel fast enough to cause a sonic boom. A  spokesman for the Alabama Air National Guard said today he would look  into the report, but no information had been provided as of this  afternoon.
It wouldn't be the first time a sonic boom has rattled walls and windows in Alabama.
Residents in Choctaw, Washington and Clarke counties reported a loud sonic boom in Feb. 2010 as three jets from the Pensacola Naval Air Station flew through the area.
In  2009, aircraft from a base in Tennessee broke the sound barrier and  caused loud booms heard by many Madison County residents. 
In  1995, police dispatchers in Pelham sent officers out looking for the  source of the noise after getting calls from concerned residents. That  noise was later determined to have been caused by a landing of Discovery  space shuttle.
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