This is a partial list of earthquakes in Mexico. This list considers every notable earthquake felt or with its epicenter within Mexico's current borders and maritime areas.
Geology
editMexico lies within two seismically active earthquake zones. The Baja California peninsula lies near the boundary of the Pacific plate and the North American plate, while southern Mexico lies just north of the boundary between the North American plate and the Cocos and Rivera tectonic plates. The Cocos plate is subducting under the North American plate at a rate of 67 mm (0.220 ft) per year, while the Pacific and Rivera plates are moving northwest relative to the North American plate. Southern Mexico also contains numerous faults, which causes that section of the country to have high tectonic activity. Northeastern Mexico and the Yucatan Peninsula are not as seismically active as the area close to the boundary between the North American and Cocos plates, but destructive earthquakes can still occur in those areas.
Earthquakes
editDate | Area | Mag. | MMI | Deaths | Injuries | Total damage / notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022-09-22 | Michoacán | 6.8 Mw | VII | 3 | 5 | Aftershock | |
2022-09-19 | Michoacán | 7.6 Mw | VIII | 2 | 35 | Severe damage | [1] |
2022-06-21 | Jalisco | 2.4 Mw | Severe damage | [2][3] | |||
2022-03-03 | Veracruz | 5.7 Mw | IV | Minor damage | [4][5] | ||
2021-09-07 | Guerrero | 7.0 Mw | VIII | 13 | 23 | Three missing, damage to 8,700 buildings | |
2020-06-23 | Oaxaca | 7.4 Mw | IX | 10 | 25 | ||
2018-02-16 | Oaxaca | 7.2 Mw | VII | 14 | 17 | Most of casualties after a helicopter crash | |
2017-09-23 | Oaxaca | 6.1 Mw | VII | 6 | 7 | 7,000 displaced | [6][7][8] |
2017-09-19 | Mexico City, Morelos, Puebla | 7.1 Mw | IX | 370 | 6,011 | ||
2017-09-07 | Chiapas, Oaxaca | 8.2 Mw | IX | 98 | 300 | Tsunami | |
2015-11-23 | Guerrero | 5.5 Mw | IV | 2 | [9] | ||
2014-07-07 | Chiapas | 6.9 Mw | VII | 5 | 12 | ||
2014-05-08 | Guerrero | 6.6 Mw | VII | ||||
2014-04-18 | Guerrero | 7.2 Mw | VII | 1 | |||
2012-03-20 | Guerrero, Oaxaca | 7.4 Mw | VIII | 2 | 11 | ||
2011-12-10 | Guerrero | 6.5 Mw | VII | 3 | 10 | ||
2011-05-05 | Guerrero | 5.7 Mw | VI | ||||
2010-06-30 | Oaxaca | 6.2 Mw | 1 | ||||
2010-04-04 | Baja California | 7.2 Mw | VII | 2–4 | 100–233 | $1.15 billion | |
2009-04-27 | Guerrero | 5.8 Mw | V | 3 | Four houses destroyed | [10][11] | |
2003-01-22 | Colima | 7.5 Mw | VIII | 29 | 300 | Severe / tsunami | |
1999-12-29 | Guerrero | 5.9 Mw | V | 1 | Minor damage | [12] | |
1999-09-30 | Oaxaca | 7.4 Mw | VIII | 35 | |||
1999-06-15 | Puebla | 7.0 Mw | VIII | 14 | 200 | MXN $200,000,000 | [13] |
1997-01-11 | Michoacán | 7.2 Mw | VIII | 1 | Damage at Arteaga | [14] | |
1995-10-21 | Chiapas | 7.1 Mw | VI | ||||
1995-10-09 | Colima, Jalisco | 8.0 Mw | VIII | 49–58 | 100 | Tsunami | |
1995-09-14 | Guerrero | 7.4 Mw | VII | 3 | |||
1989-04-25 | Guerrero | 6.9 Mw | VII | 3 | 6–350 | [15][16] | |
1985-09-19 | Michoacán, Mexico City | 8.0 Mw | IX | 5,000–45,000 | 30,000 | Extreme / tsunami | |
1981-10-25 | Michoacán | 7.2 Mw | VIII | 3 | |||
1980-10-24 | Oaxaca | 7.2 Mw | IX | 65–300+ | Many | $5 million | |
1979-10-15 | Baja California | 6.4 Mw | IX | 91 | |||
1979-03-14 | Guerrero | 7.6 Mw | VIII | 5 | 35 | ||
1973-08-28 | Puebla, Veracruz | 7.1 ML | VIII | 539–1,000 | Thousands | Severe | |
1973-01-30 | Colima | 7.5 Ms | 56 | 390 | Moderate / non-destructive tsunami | [17] | |
1968-08-02 | Guerrero, Oaxaca | 7.3 | VII | ||||
1965-08-23 | Oaxaca | 7.5 Mw | 6 | ||||
1964-07-06 | Guerrero | 7.4 Ms | IX | 40 | |||
1959-08-26 | Veracruz | 6.4 Mw | VIII | 25 | 200 | Severe | |
1957-07-28 | Guerrero, Mexico City | 7.9 Ms | VII | 54–160 | Many | Extreme / tsunami | [17] |
1941-04-15 | Colima | 7.6 Mw | IX | 90 | |||
1937-07-26 | Puebla, Veracruz | 7.3 Ms | IX | 34 | |||
1932-06-22 | Colima | 7.0 Mw | VIII | Tsunami | |||
1932-06-18 | Colima | 7.8 Mw | VIII | Tsunami | |||
1932-06-03 | Jalisco | 8.1 Mw | X | 400 | Tsunami | ||
1931-01-15 | Oaxaca | 7.8 Mw | X | 114 | |||
1920-01-03 | Puebla, Veracruz | 6.4 Ms | X–XII | 648–4,000 | 167 | [17] | |
1912-11-19 | State of Mexico | 7.0 | VIII | 140 | [18] | ||
1911-12-16 | Guerrero | 7.6 | IX | ||||
1911-06-07 | Michoacán | 7.6 | IX | 45 | |||
1909-07-30 | Guerrero | 7.6 | IX | ||||
1907-04-15 | Guerrero | 7.7 | VIII | ||||
1900-01-20 | Colima | 7.4 | VII | ||||
1899-01-24 | Guerrero | 7.5 | VII | ||||
1897-06-05 | Oaxaca | 7.4 | VII | ||||
1894-11-02 | Guerrero, Oaxaca | 7.4 | VIII | ||||
1892-02-24 | Baja California | 7.1–7.2 | X | 0 | |||
1890-12-02 | Guerrero, Oaxaca | 7.3 | VII | ||||
1889-09-06 | Guerrero | 7.1 | VI | ||||
1887-05-29 | Guerrero | 7.3 | VIII | ||||
1887-05-03 | Sonora | 7.6 Mw | 51 | ||||
1882-07-19 | Guerrero, Oaxaca | 7.5 | IX | ||||
1879-05-17 | Puebla | 7.1 | VIII | ||||
1875-03-09 | Colima, Jalisco | 7.4 | VII | ||||
1875-02-11 | Jalisco | 7.5 | VIII | ||||
1874-03-16 | Guerrero | 7.3 | VII | ||||
1872-03-27 | Oaxaca | 7.4 | VI | ||||
1870-05-11 | Oaxaca | 7.8 | IX | ||||
1864-10-03 | Puebla, Veracruz | 7.3 | VIII | ||||
1858-06-19 | Michoacán | 7.5 | IX | "Temblor de Santa Juliana" | [19] | ||
1854-05-05 | Oaxaca | 7.7 | VIII | ||||
1852-12-04 | Acapulco | 7.8 | |||||
1845-04-07 | Guerrero | 7.9 Ms | "Temblor de Santa Teresa" | [20][19] | |||
1852-11-29 | Baja California | 6.5 MLa | IX | [21] | |||
1845-03-09 | Oaxaca | 7.5 | VII | ||||
1837-11-22 | Jalisco | 7.7 | IX | ||||
1835-01-06 | State of Mexico | VII? | |||||
1820-05-04 | Guerrero | 7.6 | VII | ||||
1818-05-31 | Colima, Michoacán | 7.7 | VIII | ||||
1806-03-25 | Colima, Michoacán | 7.5 Ms | [20] | ||||
1800-03-08 | Central, Eastern, and Southeastern | VII | |||||
1787-03-28 | Guerrero, Oaxaca, Mexico City | 8.6 Mw | Severe / tsunami | ||||
1776-04-21 | Mexico City, Southern | VIII | |||||
Stover & Coffman 1993 uses various seismic scales. MLa is a local magnitude that is equivalent to ML (Richter scale) and is used for events that occurred prior to the instrumental period. It is based on the area of perceptibility (as presented on isoseismal maps). Mw = moment magnitude scale and Ms = surface-wave magnitude. The inclusion criteria for adding events are based on WikiProject Earthquakes' notability guideline that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described are also applicable to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded. |
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ "M 7.6 – 37 km SE of Aquila, Mexico". 19 September 2022.
- ^ National Autonomous University of Mexico (1998), Earthquake Catalog (in Mexican Spanish), National Seismological Service, doi:10.21766/SSNMX/EC/MX
- ^ "Falla en Ciudad Guzmán deja 102 casas afectadas, 22 de ellas no habitables". NotiespacioPV (in Spanish). 22 June 2022. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
- ^ "M 5.7 – Veracruz, Mexico". United States Geological Survey.
- ^ "Reportan daños en escuela de Coatepec tras sismo". palabrasclaras.mx (in Spanish). 2 March 2022. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
- ^ "Suman cuatro muertos en Oaxaca por sismo de ayer sábado – Matutinazo" [There are four deaths in Oaxaca due to an earthquake on Saturday – Matutinazo]. Matutinazo (in Mexican Spanish). September 24, 2017. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
- ^ "Tras el sismo, fallecen dos mujeres por infarto en la CDMX" [After the earthquake, two women died of heart attack in the CDMX]. Excélsior (in Spanish). September 23, 2017. Retrieved September 23, 2017.
- ^ "Oaxaca: Damnificadas del sismo del 23 de septiembre de 2017 tejen muñecas "con causa" | Fotos" [Oaxaca: Victims of the earthquake of September 23, 2017 weave dolls "with a cause" | Photos]. La Neta Neta! (in Mexican Spanish). September 23, 2019. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
- ^ "El pequeño terremoto de 5,6 que dejó dos muertos en México" [The small earthquake of 5.6 that left two dead in Mexico] (in Spanish). BBC. November 24, 2015. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
- ^ "Sismo deja una persona muerta en Guerrero" [Earthquake leaves a person dead in Guerrero]. El Universal (in Spanish). April 27, 2009. Archived from the original on May 24, 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
- ^ "Mexico: Earthquake". Deseret News. April 28, 2009. Archived from the original on October 16, 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
- ^ "M 5.9 – 19 km WSW of Guayameo, Mexico". United States Geological Survey.
- ^ "Puebla, a 18 años del terremoto de 1999" [Puebla, 18 years after the earthquake of 1999]. El Popular (in Spanish). June 15, 2016. Archived from the original on April 18, 2019. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
- ^ "M 7.2 – Michoacan, Mexico". United States Geological Survey.
- ^ ANSS. "Guerrero 1989 : M 6.9 – Guerrero, Mexico". Comprehensive Catalog. U.S. Geological Survey. Retrieved January 27, 2021.
- ^ PAGER-CAT Earthquake Catalog, Version 2008_06.1, United States Geological Survey, 4 September 2009
- ^ a b c NGDC 1972
- ^ Zúñiga, F.R.; Pacheco, J.F.; Guzmán-Speziale, M.; Aguirre-Dı́az, G.J.; Espı́ndola, V.H.; Nava, E. (2003). "The Sanfandila earthquake sequence of 1998, Queretaro, Mexico: activation of an undocumented fault in the northern edge of central Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt". Tectonophysics. 361 (3–4): 229–238. Bibcode:2003Tectp.361..229Z. doi:10.1016/S0040-1951(02)00606-6.
- ^ a b "19th century earthquakes in Mexico: three cases, three comparative studies" by América Molina del Villar
- ^ a b Singh, S. K.; Astiz, L.; Havskov, J. (1981), "Seismic gaps and recurrence periods of large earthquakes along the Mexican subduction zone: A reexamination", Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 71 (3), Seismological Society of America: 828, Bibcode:1981BuSSA..71..827S, doi:10.1785/BSSA0710030827
- ^ Stover, C. W.; Coffman, J. L. (1993), Seismicity of the United States, 1568–1989 (Revised), U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1527, United States Government Printing Office, pp. 72, 101
References
edit- NGDC (1972), Significant Earthquake Database (Data Set), National Geophysical Data Center, NOAA, doi:10.7289/V5TD9V7K