Magnitude 1.5 - 39 miles SE of Allakaket
February 16, 2024 17:32:51 AKST (February 17, 2024 02:32:51 UTC)
66.3137°N 151.3685°W Depth 8.2 miles (13 km)
This event has been reviewed by a seismologist
- 39 miles (63 km) SW of Pump Station #5
- 42 miles (68 km) S of Bettles
- 56 miles (90 km) NW of Pump Station #6
- 65 miles (105 km) NW of Rampart
- 67 miles (108 km) W of Stevens Village
- 73 miles (118 km) SW of Coldfoot
- 82 miles (132 km) N of Tanana
- 83 miles (134 km) E of Hughes
- 83 miles (134 km) SW of Wiseman
- 93 miles (150 km) N of Manley Hot Springs
- 97 miles (157 km) NW of Livengood
- 146 miles (236 km) NW of Fairbanks
- Magnitude type: Ml2
- Event type: earthquake
Tectonic Setting of the Brooks Range
Seismicity in the Brooks Range is characterized by intraplate earthquakes associated with mountain building and crustal reorganization. A broad earthquake band extends from northeast of the Brooks Range toward the Beaufort Sea. Earthquake source mechanisms comprise a mixture of strike-slip and normal faulting events, indicative of north-northwest compression and northeast extension. A magnitude 6.4 earthquake on August 12, 2018 located 43 miles (69 km) south of Kaktovik was the largest earthquake ever recorded north of the Brooks Range. It produced an energetic aftershock sequence that continues to this day. In 2019, a vigorous swarm sequence began in the Purcell Mountains. More than 9,000 earthquakes have been recorded as part of this swarm through the end of 2021, including five earthquakes with magnitudes larger than 5. At present, this swarm continues, though at a decreased activity level.