Contact | RSS | EN | DE | EL | ES | FR | IT | RU

Latest quakes near Chiginagak volcano since 2023 - list, stats and map

Overview

Updated: Mar 28, 2024 23:13 GMT -
Find all latest earthquakes near Chiginagak volcano in our list below, updated every minute! Events are often reported within minutes. If you just felt a quake near Chiginagak volcano, find out which quakes are happening right now!
There were no significant confirmed earthquakes near Chiginagak volcano in the past 7 days.
Since 2023, Chiginagak volcano has had 29 quakes of magnitudes up to 3.2:
  • 1 quake above magnitude 3
  • 17 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
  • 11 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don't feel.
Latest: Mag. 2.2 Earthquake 75 km SE of Ugashik, Alaska -
Strongest: Mag. 3.2 Earthquake 61 Km ESE of Ugashik, Alaska -
Number of quakes per year
Read more

Map and earthquake list

[smaller] [bigger]

Quakes, magnitude and depth over time

Past 48 hrs
Past 7 days
14 days
30 days
1 year
Earthquake depth plot
Depth and magnitude of quakes over time
Earthquake depth plot
Depth and magnitude of quakes over time
Earthquake depth plot
Depth and magnitude of quakes over time
Earthquake depth plot
Depth and magnitude of quakes over time
Earthquake depth plot
Depth and magnitude of quakes over time
Filter by magnitude:
all
1.0+
2.0+
3.0+
Check for new quakes now!
in sec
Pause automatic refreshing
Showing all recent or significant quakes since 2023, magnitude 0 or higher, within up to 30 km (19 mi) distance (29 quakes):
Latest quakes near Chiginagak volcano since 2023 - list, stats and map
Date and TimeMag
Depth
DistanceLocationDetailsMap
Mar 16, 12:30 pm (Anchorage)
Mar 16, 20:30 GMT
2.2

80 km
30 km (18 mi) to the SE 75 km SE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Saturday, February 3, 2024 GMT (2 quakes)
Feb 3, 05:02 am (Anchorage)
Feb 3, 14:02 GMT
2.3

35 km
16 km (10.1 mi) to the NE United States, 30 mi southeast of Ugashik, Lake and Peninsula, Alaska Info
Feb 3, 04:42 am (Anchorage)
Feb 3, 13:42 GMT
2.4

16 km
26 km (16 mi) to the E 59 Km SE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Friday, February 2, 2024 GMT (1 quake)
Feb 2, 11:04 am (Anchorage)
Feb 2, 19:04 GMT
2.1

101 km
16 km (9.8 mi) to the N 39 Km SE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Thursday, February 1, 2024 GMT (1 quake)
Jan 31, 09:45 pm (Anchorage)
Feb 1, 06:45 GMT
1.9

23 km
21 km (13 mi) to the NE 45 Km SE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Wednesday, January 31, 2024 GMT (1 quake)
Jan 31, 10:26 am (Anchorage)
Jan 31, 19:26 GMT
2.0

10.5 km
22 km (14 mi) to the E 62 Km SE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Tuesday, January 30, 2024 GMT (1 quake)
Jan 30, 02:13 am (GMT +0)
Jan 30, 02:13 GMT
3.2

0.1 km
30 km (19 mi) to the E 61 Km ESE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Monday, December 18, 2023 GMT (1 quake)
Dec 18, 2023 10:51 am (Anchorage)
Dec 18, 2023 18:51 GMT
1.9

81 km
15 km (9.5 mi) to the E 59 Km SE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Saturday, October 14, 2023 GMT (1 quake)
Oct 14, 2023 01:57 pm (Anchorage)
Oct 14, 2023 21:57 GMT
2.1

103 km
21 km (13 mi) to the S 68 Km SSE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Thursday, October 12, 2023 GMT (1 quake)
Oct 12, 2023 12:05 pm (Anchorage)
Oct 12, 2023 20:05 GMT
1.9

91 km
25 km (16 mi) to the NE 54 Km ESE of Ugashik, Alaska Info
Sunday, October 8, 2023 GMT (1 quake)
Oct 8, 2023 08:57 am (Anchorage)
Oct 8, 2023 16:57 GMT
1.8

96 km
15 km (9.4 mi) to the NW Alaska Peninsula Info
Show more
About these data
Estimated combined seismic energy released: 7.4 x 109 joules (2.05 megawatt hours, equivalent to 1.76 tons of TNT) | about seismic energy

Earthquake Catalog - Look up past earthquakes

Look up past earthquakes in this area by date or date range:
or
Look up quakes!
Felt a quake? Report it!
Show quakes near me!

Earthquake statistics

Number of quakes per year

Note:
The apparent increase in the number of quakes is not because global seismic activity has increased, but because the number of seismic networks around the world and their sensitivity to detect smaller quakes has been constantly increasing.
This is most evident if one looks at the number of smaller earthquakes (below magnitude 5). For larger quakes (magnitude 5 or more), the effect disappears after around the 1990s. Since then, the global coverage of earthquake of larger quakes has been nearly complete.

Average number of earthquakes

Based on data from the past 54 years and our earthquake archive back to 1900, there are about 13.5 quakes on average per year near Chiginagak volcano:
  • Mag. 4 or higher: 0.18 quakes per year (or 1 quake every 5.6 years)
  • Mag. 3 or higher: 2.1 quakes per year
  • Mag. 2 or higher: 10.6 quakes per year
  • Mag. 1 or higher: 13.3 quakes per year

Number of earthquakes over time

Past 90 days
30 days
7 days
24 hours
2023
2024 so far
Number of earthquakes over time: Past 90 days
Number of earthquakes over time: 30 days
Number of earthquakes over time: 7 days
Number of earthquakes over time: 24 hours
Number of earthquakes over time: 2023
Number of earthquakes over time: 2024 so far

Magnitude and seismic energy over time

Past 90 days
30 days
7 days
24 hours
2023
2024 so far
Magnitude and seismic energy over time: Past 90 days
Magnitude and seismic energy over time: 30 days
Magnitude and seismic energy over time: 7 days
Magnitude and seismic energy over time: 24 hours
Magnitude and seismic energy over time: 2023
Magnitude and seismic energy over time: 2024 so far

Magnitude and energy distribution

Past 90 days
30 days
7 days
24 hours
2023
2024 so far
Magnitude and energy distribution: Past 90 days
Magnitude and energy distribution: 30 days
Magnitude and energy distribution: 7 days
Magnitude and energy distribution: 24 hours
Magnitude and energy distribution: 2023
Magnitude and energy distribution: 2024 so far
Wed, 24 Aug 2005, 06:00

Chiginagak volcano (United States) - Smithsonian / USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report for 24 August-30 August 2005 (New Activity / Unrest)

AVO reported that a 400-m-wide "melt-water lake" formed in the snow-and-ice filled summit crater of Chiginagak sometime after the previous observation in August 2004. Earlier this summer, the southern crater rim of Chiginagak was breached, allowing a portion of the lake to drain. The resulting lahar left a deposit on a glacier draining the crater to the S and caused flooding of 1-2 m above normal at Indecision Creek. ... Read all