Earthquakes
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Seismograph

Shallow magnitude 3.8 earthquake strikes in central California

Ridgemark quake map
© USGS
An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 3.8 struck near Ridgemark Tuesday afternoon, according to the United States Geological Survey.

The earthquake struck at 2:09 p.m. The quake struck 6 miles south-southeast from Ridgemark and 10 miles outside of Hollister, and at a depth of 4.7 miles.

Locals in the Salinas and Hollister area reported weak shaking to the USGS site and there were no immediate reports of damage.

Tuesday's earthquake is the latest in a series of small tremors in the area. The USGS also reported four other quakes in October that centered in Ridgemark. The earthquakes have ranged from the smallest quake measuring at a magnitude-1.7 on Oct. 10, to an earthquake with a magnitude of 2.2 that struck the area on Monday.

Seismograph

A 6.4 magnitude earthquake shakes Tibet- USGS

Map of China
© earthquake.usgs.gov
A 6.4 magnitude earthquake has shaken the Himalayan region of Tibet, China, the US Geological Survey reported, adding that the depth of the quake was about 32km.

The tremor took place 17km from the Chinese town of Aduo and 294 km from the city of Chamdo, the USGS reported.

Bizarro Earth

6.9 magnitude quake strikes off the coast of Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinea Earthquake
© USGSThe 6.9 magnitude earthquake was recorded off the coast of New Britain, Papua New Guinea.
An 6.9 magnitude earthquake has struck off the coast of Papua New Guinea.

The US Geological Survey detected the epicentre near New Britain, Papua New Guinea's largest offshore island, at 4.15pm local time (7.15am BST).

It came days after another tremor measuring 6.4 hit the same region. There was no immediate information on casualties or damage.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre did not release a warning following the earthquake.

"Based on all available data, there is no tsunami threat from this earthquake," a notice said.

Papua New Guinea lies on the Pacific "Ring of Fire" - a volcanically active region subject to requent earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions.

In July 1998, two undersea quakes measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale created three tsunamis that killed at least 2,100 people near the town of Aitape.

Seismograph

Shallow 5.5 magnitude earthquake rattles northern Greece

earthquake near Ioannina, Greece
© Athens Institute of Geodynamics
An earthquake measuring 5.5 on the Richter scale striked near the city of Ioannina in northern Greece at 11.14pm local time according to the Athens Institute of Geodynamics. The epicenter was located 10km deep at the village of Pogoni, north west of Ioannina. There have been no reports of damage or injuries.

Earthquakes have historically caused widespread damage across central and southern Greece, Cyprus, Sicily and other neighboring regions.

Seismograph

6.4 magnitude earthquake recorded off Papua New Guinea

Chart
© Reuters
6.4 magnitude earthquake 144 km from Kimbe, West New Britain, Papua New Guinea

2016-10-15 08:03:38 UTC

UTC time: Saturday, October 15, 2016 08:03 AM

Your time: 2016-10-15T08:03:38Z

Magnitude Type: mwb

USGS page: M 6.4 - 145km NNE of Kimbe, Papua New Guinea

USGS status: Reviewed by a seismologist

Reports from the public: 0 people

Seismograph

Shallow 4.8 magnitude earthquake shakes Black Sea, felt in Istanbul

An earthquake with a magnitude of 4.8 magnitude struck Black Sea on Oct. 15 and was felt in Istanbul.
An earthquake with a magnitude of 4.8 magnitude struck Black Sea on Oct. 15 and was felt in Istanbul.
A magnitude 5.0 earthquake occurred in the Black Sea and was felt in the Istanbul province and other northwestern provinces, at 11:18 a.m. on Saturday.

The quake occurred 192 kilometers northeast of Istanbul and 11.4 kilometers below the surface level according to Boğaziçi University's Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute, which said the earthquake's magnitude was 4.8.

The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) stated that the magnitude was 5.2, whereas the United States Geological Survey (USGS) said the magnitude was 5.3.

Some locals were panicked due to the active seismic history of the region.

Seismograph

Earthquake of magnitude 5.8 strikes off Papua New Guinea

Chart
© Reuters
An earthquake of magnitude 5.8 struck 182 km (113 miles) southeast of Rabaul in the Pacific nation of Papua New Guinea, on Wednesday, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) said.

It was initially reported as magnitude of 5.9.

There was no immediate tsunami warning, or reports of damage or casualties from the quake, which struck at a depth of 57 km (35 miles).

Source: Reuters

Seismograph

Shallow 4.8 earthquake off the coast of Oregon

Chart
© Reuters
4.8 magnitude earthquake

2016-10-09 19:08:47 UTC

UTC time: Sunday, October 09, 2016 19:08 PM

Your time: 2016-10-09T19:08:47Z

Magnitude Type: mb

USGS page: M 4.8 - Off the coast of Oregon

USGS status: Reviewed by a seismologist

Reports from the public: 5 people

2016-10-09 19:08:47 UTC 4.8 magnitude, 10 km depth

Comment:


Seismograph

Strong 6.2 magnitude earthquake strikes off eastern Indonesia, no tsunami alert issued

Chart
© Reuters
An earthquake measuring 6.2 Richter scale jolted eastern parts of Indonesia on Sunday evening, but was not potential for tsunami, the meteorology and geophysics agency said.

The quake hit at 21 : 46 p.m. Jakarta time (1446 GMT) with epicenter at 52 km northwest Halmahera of Maluku Utara province, and depth at 117 km under sea bed, an official of the agency told Xinhua by phone.

Indonesia sits on a quake-hit zone so called the "Pacific Ring of Fire," making it vulnerable to quakes.

Source: Xinhua

Info

Scientists find unexpectedly deep seismic activity along California fault

Newport-Inglewood fault
© GoogleResearchers have found that the Newport-Inglewood fault, a major formation that spans the Los Angeles basin, is ‘seismically active down to the upper mantle.’ This is said to be one of the most dangerous faults in the Los Angeles Basin
In Southern California, scientists listening to rumblings deep underground found seismic activity at deeper-than-expected levels, and it may signal new earthquake extremes, according to a new study.

Deeper or smaller seismic activity can be very difficult to monitor, especially in urban areas, due to the distance between seismicity monitors and the noise caused by traffic and industry. In order to better see these so-called micro signals, a group of researchers temporarily deployed detectors along the Newport-Inglewood fault (NIF), which stretches nearly 50 miles (80 kilometers), from Culver City to Newport Beach, in Southern California.

"It's very helpful for us to do these kinds of studies where the seismic risk is high because of the dense concentrations of population," study lead author Asaf Inbal, a geophysics graduate student at the California Institute of Technology, told Live Science. "Most of the damage is inflicted by large earthquakes, but these small earthquakes like the ones we observe at NIF occur much more frequently, and their location can be used to highlight active faults and their depth."

By filtering out the noise, the researchers found that activity along the NIF was unusually deep and frequent compared to similar faults in the region. The researchers said these signals could lead to a better understanding of the depths at which earthquakes can occur, and could further illuminate the structure of the fault.

"Many of these micro earthquakes are deeper than expected. They occur below the crust, in the upper mantle, where rocks are usually thought to be too hot to start quakes (mantle rocks are viscous, they deform like very thick honey, without breaking)," co-author Jean Paul Ampuero, a professor of seismology at Caltech, told Live Science in an email. "They are concentrated in what appears to be the deep continuation of the Newport Inglewood fault down into the upper mantle."