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Magnitude 6.4 - 44 miles SW of Kiska Volcano
June 13, 2006 20:18:39 AKDT (June 14, 2006 04:18:39 UTC)
51.6562°N 176.8514°E Depth 2.6 miles (4 km)
This event has been reviewed by a seismologist
- 60 miles (97 km) SW of Segula Peak
- 62 miles (100 km) SE of Buldir Is
- 62 miles (100 km) SE of Buldir Island
- 67 miles (108 km) W of Davidof Island
- 69 miles (111 km) W of Little Sitkin Pass
- 93 miles (150 km) W of Amchitka
- 119 miles (192 km) W of Semisopochnoi Island
- 137 miles (222 km) SE of Shemya Is
- 176 miles (285 km) SE of Attu
- 187 miles (303 km) W of Mt. Gareloi
- 215 miles (348 km) W of Tanaga Volcano
- Magnitude type: Mw2
- Event type: N/A
To view any current tsunami advisories for this and other events please visit www.tsunami.gov
Tectonic Setting of the Aleutian Islands
The world's largest earthquakes originate along convergent plate boundaries such as the Aleutian megathrust. Starting in 1938, a series of three great earthquakes ruptured the subduction zone along its entire length from the Alaska Peninsula to the western Aleutians with the exception of a small gap near the Shumagin Islands. The sequence began with a M8.2 earthquake southwest of Kodiak Island. A M8.6 in the Andreanof Islands followed in 1957, and the sequence concluded with the Rat Islands M8.7 in 1965. The Shumagin Gap still has not ruptured, but GPS observations suggest that little strain has built up in this region.
Another notable source of seismicity in the arc are the intermediate depth earthquakes within the subducting Pacific Plate, known as the Wadati-Benioff zone. The largest recorded earthquake of this kind was the 2014 M7.9 Little Sitkin event. Shallow earthquakes associated with volcano processes and crustal faults within the overriding North American plate occur regularly and may produce vigorous aftershock or swarm-like sequences.