Earthquakes around the world

PLANETARY GEOMETRY AND MOVEMENT OF ENERGY

● Planetary geometry

There is a slight possibility of a stronger seismic event in the second lunar peak (apr 15) that could reach magnitude 7.0.

7.0-magnitude quake hits 96 km north of Tuban, Indonesia: USGS
2023-04-14

M 7.0 - 96 km N of Tuban, Indonesia
2023-04-14 09:55:45 (UTC)
6.026°S 112.033°E. 594.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

We need to keep this in mind for future reference.

According to Frank Hoogerbeets (SSGEOS)
"Larger earthquakes do not occur often over 500km deep below Java and Sumatra. In July 2004 a M 7.3 occurred deep below Sumatra, 5 months before the Boxing day earthquake. Interesting read about Sumatra/Java mega-thrust potential:

20230414_095016.jpg

● Energy movement

So the pressure is building up between the Australian plate and the Pacific plate. Over the next 6 to 8 days there is a possibility of a M7.0+ or worst case M8.0+ earthquake in the West Pacific Ocean region.

According to Jesus Ramos (Ka-tet) Seismic Alert for Chile, Japan, Alaska, Iran, Solomon Islands does not change or decrease after Indonesia quake. Impacts M7+ and worse case M8+ are expected in those areas.

After the M6.0 earthquake in Vancouver yesterday, there is a possibility of a BIG ONE in the near future, but not in the San Andreas Fault but in the Cascadia subduction zone.
The Cascadia subduction zone is where the Juan de Fuca, Explorer, and Gorda tectonic plates are subducting under the North American plate. It is now thought to be capable of producing great earthquakes of magnitude 8 or 9, like those off Indonesia in 2004 and Japan in 2011.

A:..How about a shattering subduction quake in Pacific Northwest of U.S.? We estimate 10.4 on the Richter scale. We have warned of Rainier. Imagine a 150 meter high tsunami in Puget Sound...
 
US East Coast. The energy from the 4.5 earthquake in California will move eastward causing light to moderate earthquakes in Texas and Oklahoma, although there is also the possibility of an earthquake of up to M4.0 on the east coast.

Seismic activity in Oklahoma and Texas occurred as expected after the M4.5 quake in California, however, the impact on the east coast was much less than expected

M 3.8 - 19 km NW of Stanton, Texas
● M 3.4 - 3 km ESE of Carney, Oklahoma
13:36 UTC. 7.0 km depth
● M 2.6 - 3 km ESE of Carney, Oklahoma
14:44 UTC 7.1 km depth
● M 2.8 - 15 km SSE of Stanton, Texas
05:24 UTC. 9.0 km depth
● M 2.9 - 29 km WNW of Challis, Idaho
03:19:52 UTC 14.0 km depth
chrome_screenshot_1680743079530.png

M 2.6 - 1 km W of Adams Center, New York
2023-04-14 05:30:33 (UTC)
43.862°N 76.028°W. 6.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert
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Earthquake detected in New York, this Friday, April 14, 2023, reports the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).

According to the USGS, at 1:30 a.m. today, a 2.6 magnitude quake shook western New York State outside Watertown, generating dozens of "Did you feel it?" online reports from residents shaken out of their beds by the overnight tremor. The epicenter of the shaking was in Adams Center and had a depth of 6 km. Today's quake was the strongest to hit New York in the past 30 days, but it was not as strong as a 3.8 quake that struck two months ago in West Seneca. That 3.8 quake was the strongest to hit New York in decades.

According to the Northeast States Emergency Consortium (NESEC), New York is a state with a very long history of seismic activity that has touched all parts of the state. Since the first earthquake was recorded on December 19, 1737, New York has had more than 550 earthquakes centered within its state boundaries as of 2016. It has also experienced strong ground shaking from earthquakes centered in nearby U.S. states and Canadian provinces. Most of the earthquakes in New York have occurred in the New York City metropolitan area, in the Adirondack Mountains region, and in the western part of the state.
 
Not an earthquake yet, but a doozie in the making for sure.

Experts on red alert for mega-earthquake off the US coast - after discovering a crack in 600-mile long fault line at the bottom of the Pacific

Scientists fear a hole in a 600-mile-long fault line in the Pacific could trigger a catastrophic earthquake that would decimate cities along the northwestern US.
The hole spewing hot liquid sits 50 miles off the shoreline of Oregon, on the boundary of the dipping fault known as Cascadia Subduction Zone, which spans from Northern California into Canada.
This geological feature is capable of unleashing a magnitude-9 earthquake in the Pacific Northwest - and the hole could be the fuel it needs.
 
WORLDWIDE EARTHQUAKE REPORT APRIL 14_2023

M 7.0 - 96 km N of Tuban, Indonesia
Aftershock
● M 5.4 - 112 km NE of Paciran, Indonesia
2023-04-14 10:37:55 (UTC)
6.047°S 112.968°E. 592.4 km depth
USGS earthquake alert
chrome_screenshot_1681520820363.png

● M 5.2 - 180 km WNW of Abepura, Indonesia
2023-04-14 03:01:36 (UTC)
2.091°S 139.090°E. 31.7 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

● M 5.4 - 126 km S of Kokopo, Papua New Guinea
2023-04-14 14:10:55 (UTC)
5.475°S 152.091°E. 61.9 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

● M 5.3 - 50 km ESE of Ambunti, Papua New Guinea
2023-04-14 18:09:26 (UTC)
4.469°S 143.196°E. 93.3 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

Moderate mag. 4.6 earthquake - Southern Red Sea Region, 210 km east of asamara, Central, Eritrea, on Saturday, Apr 15, 2023 at 1:37 am. Lately the region south of the Red Sea and Arabian Ocean in the Owen fracture zone has recorded moderate to strong seismic activity.

● M 4.6 - 128 km NW of Edd, Eritrea
2023-04-14 22:37:49 (UTC)
14.651°N 40.755°E. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert
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Yet another earthquake in Africa in the area known as the Great Rift Valley.

M 4.9 - Tanzania
2023-04-14 23:44:36 (UTC)
5.309°S 34.893°E. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert
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● Summary

Seismic activity level has been at high levels in the last 24 hours. This is the last chart posted by Volcanodiscovery at 00:30 UTC on April 14 Global seismic activity chart
~1 quake above magnitude 7
~5 quakes between magnitude 5 and 6
~25 quakes between magnitude 4 and 5
~91 quakes between magnitude 3 and 4
~226 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
~516 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don't feel.
~864 earthquakes in the past 24h (1114 earthquakes in the 24 hours prior to this report) Estimated combined seismic energy release: 1.2 x 105 tons of TNT or 7.5 atomic bombs
Volcanodiscovery earthquake report 24h
 

The Really Big One​

An earthquake will destroy a sizable portion of the coastal Northwest. The question is when.

Most people in the United States know just one fault line by name: the San Andreas, which runs nearly the length of California and is perpetually rumored to be on the verge of unleashing “the big one.” That rumor is misleading, no matter what the San Andreas ever does. Every fault line has an upper limit to its potency, determined by its length and width, and by how far it can slip. For the San Andreas, one of the most extensively studied and best understood fault lines in the world, that upper limit is roughly an 8.2—a powerful earthquake, but, because the Richter scale is logarithmic, only six per cent as strong as the 2011 event in Japan.

Just north of the San Andreas, however, lies another fault line. Known as the Cascadia subduction zone, it runs for seven hundred miles off the coast of the Pacific Northwest, beginning near Cape Mendocino, California, continuing along Oregon and Washington, and terminating around Vancouver Island, Canada. The “Cascadia” part of its name comes from the Cascade Range, a chain of volcanic mountains that follow the same course a hundred or so miles inland. The “subduction zone” part refers to a region of the planet where one tectonic plate is sliding underneath (subducting) another. Tectonic plates are those slabs of mantle and crust that, in their epochs-long drift, rearrange the earth’s continents and oceans. Most of the time, their movement is slow, harmless, and all but undetectable. Occasionally, at the borders where they meet, it is not.

Take your hands and hold them palms down, middle fingertips touching. Your right hand represents the North American tectonic plate, which bears on its back, among other things, our entire continent, from One World Trade Center to the Space Needle, in Seattle. Your left hand represents an oceanic plate called Juan de Fuca, ninety thousand square miles in size. The place where they meet is the Cascadia subduction zone. Now slide your left hand under your right one. That is what the Juan de Fuca plate is doing: slipping steadily beneath North America. When you try it, your right hand will slide up your left arm, as if you were pushing up your sleeve. That is what North America is not doing. It is stuck, wedged tight against the surface of the other plate.

Without moving your hands, curl your right knuckles up, so that they point toward the ceiling. Under pressure from Juan de Fuca, the stuck edge of North America is bulging upward and compressing eastward, at the rate of, respectively, three to four millimetres and thirty to forty millimetres a year. It can do so for quite some time, because, as continent stuff goes, it is young, made of rock that is still relatively elastic. (Rocks, like us, get stiffer as they age.) But it cannot do so indefinitely. There is a backstop—the craton, that ancient unbudgeable mass at the center of the continent—and, sooner or later, North America will rebound like a spring. If, on that occasion, only the southern part of the Cascadia subduction zone gives way—your first two fingers, say—the magnitude of the resulting quake will be somewhere between 8.0 and 8.6. That’s the big one. If the entire zone gives way at once, an event that seismologists call a full-margin rupture, the magnitude will be somewhere between 8.7 and 9.2. That’s the very big one.

Flick your right fingers outward, forcefully, so that your hand flattens back down again. When the next very big earthquake hits, the northwest edge of the continent, from California to Canada and the continental shelf to the Cascades, will drop by as much as six feet and rebound thirty to a hundred feet to the west—losing, within minutes, all the elevation and compression it has gained over centuries. Some of that shift will take place beneath the ocean, displacing a colossal quantity of seawater. (Watch what your fingertips do when you flatten your hand.) The water will surge upward into a huge hill, then promptly collapse. One side will rush west, toward Japan. The other side will rush east, in a seven-hundred-mile liquid wall that will reach the Northwest coast, on average, fifteen minutes after the earthquake begins. By the time the shaking has ceased and the tsunami has receded, the region will be unrecognizable. Kenneth Murphy, who directs fema’s Region X, the division responsible for Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Alaska, says, “Our operating assumption is that everything west of Interstate 5 will be toast.”

In the Pacific Northwest, the area of impact will cover some hundred and forty thousand square miles, including Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Eugene, Salem (the capital city of Oregon), Olympia (the capital of Washington), and some seven million people. When the next full-margin rupture happens, that region will suffer the worst natural disaster in the history of North America, outside of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, which killed upward of a hundred thousand people. By comparison, roughly three thousand people died in San Francisco’s 1906 earthquake. Almost two thousand died in Hurricane Katrina. Almost three hundred died in Hurricane Sandy. fema projects that nearly thirteen thousand people will die in the Cascadia earthquake and tsunami. Another twenty-seven thousand will be injured, and the agency expects that it will need to provide shelter for a million displaced people, and food and water for another two and a half million. “This is one time that I’m hoping all the science is wrong, and it won’t happen for another thousand years,” Murphy says.

 
WORLDWIDE EARTHQUAKE REPORT APRIL 15_2023

Magnitude Mw 5.9 Region SOUTHWEST INDIAN RIDGE

Seismic activity continues in this region, Note the proximity to the collapse of the chamber in Mayotte and the seismic activity in the Arabian and Indian Seas

Mainshock

M 5.9 - Southwest Indian Ridge
2023-04-15 15:01:33 (UTC)33.754°S 56.184°E10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

Foreshock

M 4.8 - Southwest Indian Ridge
2023-04-15 14:41:59 (UTC)
33.760°S 56.093°E. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

Aftershock

M 5.0 - Southwest Indian Ridge
2023-04-15 21:03:06 (UTC)
33.902°S 56.553°E. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert
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● M 5.5 - 97 km SSW of Pagar Alam, Indonesia
2023-04-15 15:07:06 (UTC)4.865°S 102.974°E56.7 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

● M 4.6 - Jamaica region
2023-04-15 21:35:33 (UTC)
17.903°N 76.501°W. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert


● Summary

Seismic activity level has been at moderate levels in the last 24 hours. This is the last chart posted by Volcanodiscovery at 00:00 UTC on April 16 Global seismic activity chart
~3 quakes between magnitude 5 and 6
~46 quakes between magnitude 4 and 5
~91 quakes between magnitude 3 and 4
~264 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
~468 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don't feel.
~872 earthquakes in the past 24h (864 earthquakes in the 24 hours prior to this report) Estimated combined seismic energy release: 45133 tons of TNT or 2.8 atomic bombs.
Volcanodiscovery earthquake report 24h
 
Last week saw 3 M6 with the highest being a M6.5 in the Kamchatka region of Russia.
In the usual area, there were 2 out of 77 earthquakes worldwide equal to or greater than 4.5 and 1990 out of 2282 quakes of all sizes.
Percentage: 87.2%
Last week saw 1 M7 (M7.0 in Indonesia) and 1 M6( M6.0 in Canada).
In the usual area, there were 2 out of 84 earthquakes worldwide equal to or greater than 4.5 and 1857 out of 2321 quakes of all sizes.
Percentage: 80.0%
Earthquakes 7 days to April 16th 2023.gif
 
CARIBBEAN SEISMIC ACTIVITY

While the seismic swarm continues in the region of Puerto Rico with earthquakes ranging from 2.5 to 3.9 magnitude and yesterday's Jamaica earthquake, two strong M5.0+ earthquakes have shaken the Caribbean islands further to the southeast.

● M 4.6 - Jamaica region

●M 5.2 - 39 km ENE of Codrington, Antigua and Barbuda
2023-04-16 09:49:51 (UTC)
17.800°N 61.508°W. 25.8 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

●M 5.1 - 3 km SSE of Grand-Bourg, Guadeloupe
2023-04-16 11:22:21 (UTC)
15.853°N 61.306°W. 104.1 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

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This activity is the result of the movement of the energy coming from the earthquakes in the southwest Pacific, hitting first the west coast of Mexico and Central America and then reaching the Caribbean islands.

According to Ka-Tet's analysis, new earthquakes are not ruled out and the next hours are critical for Peru, Central Mexico. Caribbean and North of Chile. America continent is getting all the compensation from the west Pacific earthquakes in less of 24 hours
According to Analyst Jesus Ramos Ka-tet seismic activity from Mexico and Central America is migrating to the Caribbean in the right way
 
Campi Flegrei Caldera / Phlegraean Fields - Pozzuoli / Napoli - Italy
16 April 2023
German Vulkane.net wrote another of many articles, due to the strong unrest under the Campi Flegrei Caldera near Napoli, Italy. Only recently, i believe it was during the month of March 2023, a record number of earthquakes were registered; 600+ ! The uplifting in the area continues...



Earthquake Md 2.8 beneath the Campi Flegrei caldera

Date 15 April 2023 | Time: 05:54:37 UTC | 40.816 ; 14.158 | Depth: 2.4 km | Md 2.8

cfcal.jpg

Yesterday, an earthquake of magnitude 2.8 occurred beneath the Phlegraean Fields, the vibrations of which were felt by the residents of the caldera. The shallow earthquake focus, which was located at a depth of only 2.4 km, was probably to blame. The EMSC located the epicentre 10 km west-southwest of Naples. The localisation is more precise on the basis of the detailed map of the INGV: according to this, the epicentre was located just off the coast south of the old town of Pozzuoli, even more precisely, off Via Pozzuoli. The quake was part of the swarm that has been shaking the caldera for years. Since the day before yesterday, the seismometers have registered 24 tremors, of which the one described at the beginning was the strongest. This time, the tremors were not concentrated only in the Solfatara area, but scattered a little in the Bay of Pozzuoli.

As after any perceptible earthquake, there is growing concern that an eruption of the Caldera volcano will soon occur, but if and when the earthquakes will culminate in an eruption is completely open. The earthquakes are also only the symptom of the real problem, which is the ground uplift caused by the inflation of magmatic fluids.

Last week's report stated that during the observation period 3-9 April 2023, ground uplift continued to be around 15 millimetres per month. Since 2011, the uplift at the RITE monitoring station has been 101 cm. It is noticeable that the average gas temperature of the Pisciarelli fumarole was 96 degrees C, which is significantly higher than in recent months. However, this effect could be due to the fact that the INGV Napoli measures the gas temperatures at a distance of 5 m from the gas outlet and the normal air temperature should have an effect on the measurements. A total of 37 earthquakes were detected last week.

Speaking of Italy, there was a Ml 2.9 earthquake today northwest of the Lipari Islands with a hypocentre at 9 km depth. There have also been several weak earth tremors again in the area of Vulcano in recent days.


END OF ARTICLE • DeepL translated
 
Cascadia fault zone earthquake study
16 April 2023

Vulkane.net wrote an article about the Cascadia subduction zone, so i thought i put the translation into in this thread


cascadia.jpg

New concern of mega earthquake at Cascadia subduction zone due to fluid leakage
by Marc Szeglat

It is probably due to the Mw 5.8 earthquake
that occurred two days ago off Canada's Vancouver Island that the American media are now once again focusing on the fear of a mega-earthquake at the large current zone, because otherwise the report by researchers at the University of Washington would have fizzled out without a sound. They drew attention to a phenomenon on the seabed off the coast that has been known since 2015 and was then simply dismissed as a hole in the ocean floor. But a fluid flows out of the hole, which is noticeable in water streaks and reminds me of the mouth of a fumarole, or a black smoker, from which hydrothermal solutions emerge.

Scientists paid new attention to the phenomenon
and their situation analysis concludes that a fluid is leaking from the luch that could act as a lubricant in the ocean crust at the Cascadia fault zone and could be responsible for the plates sliding smoothly past each other. The concern is that as the fluid leaks out, the lubricant may become scarce at the depth of the fault zone and the plates may become entangled.

Such entanglements cause a strong build-up of stress in the earth's crust, which could then explode in an earthquake. It has been known for a long time that a strong earthquake with magnitudes in the eighth range can occur along the Cascadia fault zone, and even a quake with a magnitude of new cannot be ruled out. Metropolises such as Vancouver (Canada) and Seattle (USA), which lie less kilometres behind the fault zone, could be affected.


END OF ARTICLE
 
WORLDWIDE EARTHQUAKE REPORT APRIL 16_2023

It could be said that in the last two days we have returned to the average levels of seismic activity, which is between 700 and 800 daily earthquakes above M2.0+ The levels were altered after the earthquake in Türkiye

● M 5.4 - South Pacific Ocean, New Zealand,
2023-04-16 05:23:37 (UTC)
31.93°S / 177.98°W. 100 km depth
GeoNet earthquake alert

● M 4.0 - 23 km SW of Afşin, Turkey
2023-04-16 22:55:57 (UTC)
38.078°N 36.762°E. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

Atypical earthquake in Durango, Mexico. Seismicity in Durango and its surroundings is infrequent, however in the last 48 hours Durango has registered three light M3.7 and two M4.3 earthquakes.

● M 4.3 - 67 km northeast of Santiago Papasquiaro Durango
2023-04-16 04:57:30 (UTC)
25.50⁰ N -104.98 E 18 km depth
SSN earthquake alert

SSGEOS Earthquake Forecast updated 16 April 2023, 19:00 UTC

Seismic activity may approach magnitude 6. Major seismic activity is less likely.

MAGNITUDE PROBABILITY

updated 16 April 2023, 19:00 UTC

M 6.0-6.4M 6.5-6.9M 7.0-8.4M 8.5+
60%40%40%10%
Potential regions
Atmospheric fluctuations indicate the following areas

●Nicobar Islands, Assam and Tibet.
●Japan, Taiwan, Sumatra and the New Britain region.
●Guerrero, Mexico and the Gulf of California, the fluctuation in this area is severe and could be relevant in the coming days.
Latest Atmospheric fluctuation
20230416_184703.jpg

● Summary

Seismic activity level has been at  low levels in the last 24 hours. This is the last chart posted by Volcanodiscovery at 00:00 UTC on April 16 Global seismic activity chart
  • 3 quakes above magnitude 5
  • 31 quakes between magnitude 4 and 5
  • 93 quakes between magnitude 3 and 4
  • 236 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
  • 398 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don't feel.
~761 earthquakes in the past 24h (872 earthquakes in the 24 hours prior to this report) Estimated combined seismic energy release: 5377 tons of TNT or 0.3 atomic bombs.
Volcanodiscovery earthquake report 24h
 
Here's something I found interesting:

"Newly Discovered Seafloor Seep" Off Oregon Coast On Fault Line May Be Harbinger To Major Quake​

"Chemically distinct liquid shooting up from the seafloor" has been detected by researchers on a stretch of a 600-mile-long fault line in the Pacific Ocean, which is situated only 50 miles away from the Oregon coast, and could potentially trigger a catastrophic earthquake in the Pacific Northwest.
 
WORLDWIDE EARTHQUAKE REPORT APRIL 17_2023

Intense seismic activity in the West Pacific. Several earthquakes occurred in the Kermadec Islands that Geonet-NZ recorded as M5.0+ and USGS as M4.0+ The following earthquakes were the most significant ones

● M 5.2 - Kermadec Islands region
2023-04-17 11:01:33 (UTC)
31.798°S 178.839°W. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

● M 5.2 - Kermadec Islands region
2023-04-17 13:26:33 (UTC)
31.858°S 178.820°W. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

● M 5.0 - Kermadec Islands region
2023-04-17 11:42:15 (UTC)
31.822°S 178.832°W. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

●《M 4.6 - Kermadec Islands region
2023-04-17 11:57:48 (UTC)
31.793°S 179.000°W. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert
chrome_screenshot_1681779338925.png

● M 5.5 - 101 km SSW of Pagar Alam, Indonesia
2023-04-17 11:05:55 (UTC)
4.891°S 102.954°E. 58.4 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

● M 5.0 - 118 km SE of Kimbe, Papua New Guinea
2023-04-17 19:12:26 (UTC)
6.288°S 150.910°E. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

● M 5.0 - 53 km ESE of Ambunti, Papua New Guinea
2023-04-17 20:06:29 (UTC)
4.465°S 143.236°E. 78.8 km depth
USGS earthquake alert
chrome_screenshot_1681780133893.png

● M 4.3 - 83 km SE of Karpathos, Greece
2023-04-17 22:17:23 (UTC)
34.899°N 27.750°E. 10.0 km depth
USGS earthquake alert

SSGEOS Earthquake Forecast: Tomorrow we will have a planetary conjunction involving Mercury-Sun-Neptune that does not converge and not much is expected. Following the conjunction is going to follow a lunar geometry with jupiter followed by a new moon, this is a lunar conjunction with the sun. This combination may result in stronger seismic activity potentially reaching M6.0+. The most critical days will be around April 22.

On the 21st and 22nd we have two 90⁰ angles converging with a planetary conjunction both involving Venus.

●Sun-Venus-Uranus
●Venus-Mercury-Jupiter

We could see a very strong seismic event probably from April 22-25. New atmospheric fluctuations targets Kamchatka, southern Japan, the Philippines and Kermadec Islands
in the West Pacific and the northwest coast of the American continent.
20230417_194554.jpg
20230417_194602.jpg


● Summary

Seismic activity level has been at  low levels in the last 24 hours. This is the last chart posted by Volcanodiscovery at 00:00 UTC on April 16 Global seismic activity chart
  • 10 quakes above magnitude 5
  • 42 quakes between magnitude 4 and 5
  • 112 quakes between magnitude 3 and 4
  • 254 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
  • 549 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don't feel.
~967 earthquakes in the past 24h (761 earthquakes in the 24 hours prior to this report) Estimated combined seismic energy release: 21846 tons of TNT or 1.4 atomic bombs
Volcanodiscovery earthquake report 24h
 

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