Magnitude 5.2 - 9 miles E of Minto
August 30, 2014 19:06:57 AKDT (August 31, 2014 03:06:57 UTC)
65.1526°N 149.0398°W    Depth 10.3 miles (16 km)
This event has been reviewed by a seismologist
- 25 miles (40 km) SW of Pump Station #7
- 29 miles (47 km) SW of Livengood
- 37 miles (59 km) NW of Ester
- 41 miles (66 km) N of Nenana
- 41 miles (66 km) SE of Rampart
- 44 miles (71 km) W of Fox
- 45 miles (72 km) NW of Fairbanks
- 46 miles (74 km) W of Chatanika
- 47 miles (76 km) NW of Fort Wainwright
- 48 miles (77 km) E of Manley Hot Springs
- 52 miles (84 km) SE of Pump Station #6
- 273 miles (442 km) N of Anchorage
      - Magnitude type: Mw
- Event type: N/A
 Tectonic Setting of Interior Alaska
 Interior Alaska seismicity reflects transpression and block rotation. Three different types of
                tectonic structures contribute to generating seismicity in this region: right-lateral strike-slip
                faults (Denali, Tintina, Kaltag), north-northeast-trending seismic zones (Minto, Fairbanks, Salcha,
                Dall City, Rampart), and thrust faults in the northern foothills of the Alaska Range. The largest
                event recorded in the Interior was the 1937 M7.3 Salcha Earthquake. It produced extensive ground
                failures in the epicentral area, but there was no documented evidence of surface rupture. Other
                notable events include the 1968 M7.1 Rampart, the 1985 M6.1 Dall City, and the 1995 M6.0 Minto Flats
                earthquakes. The Fairbanks Seismic Zone was the site of three M5-6 earthquakes in 1967. A M7.2
                thrusting event occurred in 1947 at the front edge of the northern foothills of the Alaska Range
                and south of the Salcha Seismic Zone. This event, along with current seismic activity, is indicative
                of ongoing thrusting deformation on the north side of the central Alaska Range. East of longitude
                146 degrees west, the seismic activity between the Tintina Fault to the north and the Denali Fault to the
                south decreases considerably.