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Earthquakes for Day D14807

Time (GMT)LongitudeLatitudeMagnitudeNotes
01:54:46 AM70.23530.025 4.5Pakistan
11:49:58 PM-124.45240.304 2.9offshore Northern California
11:42:14 PM126.742 3.775 4.7Kepulauan Talaud; Indonesia
10:25:45 PM-154.76657.267 2.5Kodiak Island region; Alaska
09:37:02 PM-115.25332.179 3.0Baja California; Mexico
09:34:17 PM-153.89164.173 3.1Central Alaska
09:17:36 PM-115.72331.293 2.8Baja California; Mexico
08:35:34 PM-136.262-54.364 5.2Pacific-Antarctic Ridge
04:54:26 PM-65.43817.752 2.7Puerto Rico region
04:20:02 PM-175.084-15.551 5.3Tonga
04:18:21 PM-119.99137.370 2.6Central California
02:44:15 PM-169.73252.683 4.3Fox Islands; Aleutian Islands; Alaska
01:19:01 PM-150.68161.768 2.5Southern Alaska
09:52:26 AM-118.78539.022 2.9Nevada
09:42:15 AM-115.25032.185 2.5Baja California; Mexico
09:04:17 AM121.60023.464 4.7Taiwan
08:59:33 AM-62.42918.436 4.9Anguilla region; Leeward Islands
07:01:44 AM-72.92719.352 4.3Haiti region
06:53:31 AM-115.20132.135 2.6Baja California; Mexico
06:07:43 AM-69.949-24.807 5.7Antofagasta; Chile
04:34:00 AM-178.897-20.610 4.8Fiji region

Data kindly supplied by : U.S. Geological Survey

Notes

1. The time of the earthquake is given in Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) or now known as Universal Co-ordinated Time (UCT). You may need to take into account of local time zone.

2. The magnitude of the earthquake is not a linear scale. Each unit represents that the earthquake is ten times greater - it is a logarithmic scale. This is the most important thing to bear in mind. The difference between magnitude 3.0 and 6.0 is a thousand times, and 9.0 is a million times stronger than 3.0.


MagnitudeEffectsOccurrences each year
less than 2.5Not usually felt, detected only by sensitive seismographsmillions
2.5 to 5.4 Often felt, objects may shake, but only causes minor damage40,000
5.5 to 6.0 Limited localised damage to buildings close to epicentre800
6.1 to 6.9 May cause considerable damage in heavily populated areas150
7.0 to 7.9 A Major earthquake with potentially serious damage15
over 8.0Devastating at epicentre, felt thousands of miles away1

3. The epicentre of an earthquake is located vertically above the source. The depth of the earthquake will determine how significant the effects of the quake, shallow ones are normally more destructive.

4. In areas where earthquakes are frequent the infrastructure is designed to cope with all but the very strongest earthquakes. A large earthquake in an area where they rarely occur would have a much greater effect.

5. The size of circle denoting the earthquake is proportional to its magnitude.

6. The color of the circles represents the time in GMT of the quake. Blue ones are early in the day and the circles become progressively redder as the day wears on.