USGS Scientists Find Seafloor Faults Near Puerto Rico Quakes’ Epicenters

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5/27/2020

USGS Scientists Find Seafloor Faults Near Puerto Rico Quakes’ Epicenters

USGS Scientists Find Seafloor Faults Near Puerto Rico Quakes’ Epicenters Contacts

Release Date: MAY 26, 2020

Most residents of southern Puerto Rico were startled by the sequence of earthquakes that began Dec. 28, 2019 and included a magnitude 6.4 quake on Jan. 7, 2020. Aftershocks are expected to continue for years, including some relatively strong ones, like a May 2 magnitude 5.4 temblor. Many islanders have lived through hurricanes, but the last major earthquake to be felt on Puerto Rico, a magnitude 7.2 that occurred northwest of the island in 1918, was beyond the living memory of most islanders. USGS seismologists were surprised too – not by the fact that the earthquakes occurred, but by where they occurred. Puerto Rico lies on an active boundary between the Caribbean and North American plates, with the northeast corner of the Caribbean plate moving eastward about two centimeters (less than an inch) per year along a strike-slip fault. There is geologic evidence of earthquakes that probably took place millennia ago, while history records earthquakes and tsunamis in Puerto Rico as far back as the 1500s. But most seismic activity has been on the north side of the island, not the south side, where previously unknown undersea faults may have triggered this latest earthquake series. The USGS is working to identify and map faults in the region, in order to estimate the location and magnitude of potential earthquakes. With more than 3 million U.S. citizens in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, the risk to lives and property from earthquakes and tsunamis is significant. USGS seismic research can help inform better building codes, safer zoning, and public

Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey Office of Communications and Publishing 12201 Sunrise Valley Drive Reston, VA 20192 United States Phone: 703-648-4460

Heather Dewar Public Affairs Specialist Eastern States Email: hdewar@usgs.gov Phone: 352-264-3542

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In early March, before USGS field researchers were practicing social distancing, marine technicians Alex Nichols (L) and Eric Moore (R) deployed a hydrophone

https://www.usgs.gov/news/usgs-scientists-find-seafloor-faults-near-puerto-rico-quakes-epicenters

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