Earthquakes
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Bizarro Earth

Southeast of the Loyalty Islands - Earthquake Magnitude 6.6

Loyalty Quake_030312
© USGSEarthquake Location
Date-Time
Saturday, March 03, 2012 at 12:19:55 UTC

Saturday, March 03, 2012 at 11:19:55 PM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location
22.157°S, 170.317°E

Depth
15.2 km (9.4 miles)

Region
SOUTHEAST OF THE LOYALTY ISLANDS

Distances
180 km (111 miles) W of Ile Hunter, Loyalty Isl., New Caledonia

260 km (161 miles) ESE of Tadine, Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia

399 km (247 miles) E of NOUMEA, New Caledonia

1686 km (1047 miles) NNW of Auckland, New Zealand

Bizarro Earth

Island off west coast of Scotland shaken by five tremors

Image
© Ordnance Survey
More small earthquakes have hit the island of Islay off the west coast of Scotland.

Five tremors shook the island between 07:04 and 09:32. One resident described a very deep, loud rumble.

The British Geological Survey recorded the strongest at a magnitude of 2.8. A spokeswoman said there were no reports of any damage.

A further four small earthquakes have already affected the area this month, reaching up to a magnitude of 2.6.

Maha Rangafamy, 28, who lives in Port Charlotte, felt one of the tremors on Wednesday morning.

Alarm Clock

Aftershocks of 2011 killer earthquake still hitting near Japan

Japon aftershocks
© U.S. Geological Survey
It's been almost one year since the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami devasted eastern Japan, but major aftershocks continue to occur. The original "undersea megathrust" quake just off Japan's coastline on March 11, 2011, was a magnitude 9.0, one of the worst ever recorded.

At about 8:30 a.m. today, Central time, a magnitude 5.7 quake ocurred near the island of Honshu, 77 miles east southeast of Tokyo , according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The Geological Survey's PAGER earthquake risk site indicates this most recent tembler may have been perceived as moderate shaking by 962,000 people in Japan, and may have caused some moderate damage to vulnerable buildings.

Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 4.7 - France

Image
© USGS
Date-Time:
Sunday, February 26, 2012 at 22:37:56 UTC
Sunday, February 26, 2012 at 11:37:56 PM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
44.590°N, 6.727°E

Depth:
3 km (1.9 miles) (poorly constrained)

Region:
FRANCE

Distances:
92 km (57 miles) SW of Torino, Italy

102 km (63 miles) SE of Grenoble, France

107 km (66 miles) NNW of Nice, France

582 km (361 miles) SE of PARIS, France

Evil Rays

East Siberia Quake to Trigger New Series of Tremors - Scientist

Image
© RIA Novosti. Ivan AfanasievCrack in apartment in Kyzyl
The 6.8 magnitude earthquake that struck the Tyva republic in Russia's East Siberia on Sunday will trigger a new series of earthquakes in the region, a Russian scientist said.

"Judging from the data received from our stations, this is not the continuation of the Tyva earthquake that occurred in late 2011 with its epicenter at the Academician Obruchev Ridge but signals a new series of earthquakes," said Viktor Seleznyov, director of the Geophysical Institute at the Siberian branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

The earthquake, the second powerful tremor in East Siberia in the past two months, had its epicenter located 107 km (66 miles) east of the city of Kyzyl near the border with Mongolia, at a depth of 15 km. The earthquake struck at 10:20 a.m. Moscow time (06:20 GMT) with a magnitude of 6 to 7 points in the epicenter.

The earthquake caused no casualties or damage, according to preliminary data reported by the Russian Emergencies Ministry.

Bizarro Earth

USGS: Southwestern Siberia - Earthquake Magnitude 6.7

Siberian Quake_260212
© USGSEarthquake Location
Date-Time
Sunday, February 26, 2012 at 06:17:19 UTC

Sunday, February 26, 2012 at 01:17:19 PM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location
51.731°N, 95.921°E

Depth
11.7 km (7.3 miles)

Region
SOUTHWESTERN SIBERIA, RUSSIA

Distances
101 km (62 miles) E of Kyzyl, Russia

333 km (206 miles) NE of Ulaangom, Mongolia

375 km (233 miles) SE of Abakan, Russia

3758 km (2335 miles) ENE of MOSCOW, Russia

Bizarro Earth

Panic After Powerful Quake Rocks Taiwan

Taipei: A shallow 5.9-magnitude earthquake sent panicked people fleeing onto the streets in Taiwan's second-largest city of Kaohsiung on Sunday as rail services were temporarily suspended.

The quake struck 57 kilometres (35 miles) east of the city at 10:34 am (0234 GMT) at a depth of just four kilometres, the US Geological Survey said.

The Hong Kong Observatory measured the quake at magnitude 6.0, while Taiwan's Seismology Centre put the magnitude at 6.1. TV footage showed residents of Kaohsiung running into the streets, fearing their buildings might collapse. Services on a high-speed railway linking Kaohsiung with Taiwan's capital of Taipei in the north were halted temporarily, railway officials told AFP.

There were no immediate reports of injuries or major damage. The greater metropolitan area of Kaohsiung has a population of nearly three million people. Taiwan is regularly hit by earthquakes as the island lies near the junction of two tectonic plates.

In September 1999, a 7.6-magnitude tremor killed around 2,400 people in the deadliest natural disaster in the island's recent history.

Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 4.3 - Island of Hawaii

Image
© USGS
Date-Time:
Friday, February 24, 2012 at 13:52:45 UTC
Friday, February 24, 2012 at 03:52:45 AM at epicenter

Location:
19.438°N, 155.309°W

Depth:
5.7 km (3.5 miles)

Region:
ISLAND OF HAWAII, HAWAII

Distances:
8 km (5 miles) W (261°) from Volcano, HI

19 km (12 miles) W (259°) from Fern Forest, HI

21 km (13 miles) WSW (237°) from Mountain View, HI

38 km (24 miles) SW (218°) from Hilo, HI

335 km (208 miles) SE (128°) from Honolulu, HI

Bizarro Earth

Japan quake studies suggest harder jolt to US Pacific Northwest possible

Image
© Nevada Seismological Laboratory, University of Nevada, RenoThe red dots represent aftershocks from the Japan quake, which roughly trace the area that shook hardest there. Superimposed on a map of the Northwest, the result shows where the strongest ground motion is likely to strike during the next quake on the Cascadia subduction zone, the underwater fault marked by the black line. The green line is the relative location of Japan's subduction zone.
Studies of last year's giant Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan suggest that shaking from a Cascadia megaquake could be stronger than expected along the coasts of Washington, Oregon and British Columbia, researchers reported Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Scientists are still unraveling last year's giant Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan, and some of what they're finding doesn't bode well for the Pacific Northwest.

Detailed analyses of the way the Earth warped along the Japanese coast suggest that shaking from a Cascadia megaquake could be stronger than expected along the coasts of Washington, Oregon and British Columbia, researchers reported Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

"The Cascadia subduction zone can be seen as a mirror image of the Tohoku area," said John Anderson, of the University of Nevada.

Anderson compiled ground-motion data from the Japan quake and overlaid it on a map of the Pacific Northwest, which has a similar fault - called a subduction zone - lying offshore.

Bizarro Earth

US: Hawaii scientists monitor earthquake swarm near Kilauea volcano

Image
© USGS
48 small quakes and counting on the Big Island as of Wednesday morning

Scientists at the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory are keeping an eye on a swarm of small earthquakes around the active Kilauea volcano. In its morning status report, HVO wrote that there "is an ongoing seismic swarm just northwest of the summit."

From the Wednesday status report, updated at 7:29 HST:
A swarm of shallow earthquakes started after midnight last night about 5 km (3 mi) northwest of Halema'uma'u Crater that was ongoing as of this posting. Forty-eight earthquakes were strong enough to be located beneath Kilauea: 39 quakes within the swarm so far at a maximum rate of 6/hr (including a preliminary magnitude-3.4 quake at 6:56 am), two deep quakes beneath the southwest rift zone, two beneath the southeast summit caldera, one within the upper east rift zone, four on south flank faults. Seismic tremor levels were low and dropped slightly during deflation.
Most of the quakes have been in the magnitude 2.0 vicinity, but a few reached over 3.0.