Magnitude 4.3 - 103 miles W of Elfin Cove
October 10, 2023 00:32:46 AKDT (October 10, 2023 08:32:46 UTC)
57.8837°N 139.0981°W Depth 3.2 miles (5 km)
No reports of this event being felt have been received at this time.
This event has been reviewed by a seismologist
- 106 miles (171 km) W of Pelican
- 117 miles (189 km) S of Yakutat
- 128 miles (207 km) W of Gustavus
- 135 miles (218 km) W of Hoonah
- 143 miles (231 km) W of Tenakee Springs
- 151 miles (244 km) NW of Sitka
- 155 miles (251 km) SW of Klukwan
- 161 miles (261 km) SW of Haines
- 169 miles (274 km) W of Angoon
- 170 miles (275 km) SE of Icy Bay
- 173 miles (280 km) W of Juneau
- Magnitude type: Mb2
- Event type: earthquake
Tectonic Setting of the Yakutat Block
The Yakutat microplate is the latest addition to the assemblage of accreted terranes that make up southern Alaska. The microplate was transported northward along margin-parallel transform faults,
including the Queen Charlotte and Fairweather faults. Eventually, the microplate encountered the continental margin of southern Alaska, where the ongoing collision creates complex seismotectonic interactions resulting in a very active seismic belt. Two great earthquakes in 1899 (M8.1 and M8.2) re-arranged landforms in the Yakutat Bay area, resulting in up to 40 feet of uplift and 6 feet of land subsidence. Another notable event in this region was the 1958 M7.7 Lituya Bay Earthquake, which ruptured from the head of Yakutat Bay along the entire length of the Fairweather Fault. This earthquake caused a massive landslide that crashed into Lituya Bay, creating a tsunami wave 1,720 feet high. The most recent major earthquake in the region was the 1972 M7.4 Saint Elias Earthquake. In the offshore zone, the most notable structures are the Transition Fault that separates the Yakutat microplate from the Pacific Plate and the northern Gulf of Alaska fault zone. A sequence of strong earthquakes in the Gulf of Alaska, including a M7.7 in 1987 and a M7.8 in 1988, produced significant ground motions that were felt along the entire southeast and southern Alaska coast. The Transition Fault is not known to have produced significant earthquakes except for a 1973 M6.7 event along the southeastern end of the fault. This region has a high level of background seismicity, with hundreds of earthquakes recorded each year, the majority of which are shallow and located within the 50-mile-wide coastal zone.