QuakeShake

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09/06/2026

The Cuban M6.1 earthquake is an unusual earthquake. It is an example of an Intraplate earthquake. Irish earthquakes are also intraplate earthquakes but much smaller magnitude by comparison! Put very simply these earthquakes dont occur near the edge of a tectonic plate boundary but inside of the plate.

A small link between Ireland and Cuba ๐Ÿค

Photos from QuakeShake's post 08/06/2026

A magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck south of Mindanao, Philippines, at approximately 7:37 a.m. local time on 8 June 2026, causing strong shaking across the region. The USGS estimated that around 22 million people experienced moderate (MMI V) to severe shaking (MMI VIII), with more than one million exposed to intensity VIII shaking. So far there have been reports of buildings collapsing and fatalities. At the time of writing there have been 15 fatalities and 120 injured but this number is expected to rise.

The Philippines is situated within one of the world's most complex and active tectonic setting. This earthquake occurred within a zone where the Philippine Sea Plate converges (moves towards) surrounding plates, including the Sunda Plate. At this location, the Philippine Plate is moving toward the Sunda Plate at a rate of approximately 7.3 centimeters per year (USGS, 2026). This earthquake may be what is known as an "intraslab earthquake" as this earthquake occured as the subducting plate bends and deforms while sinking into the Earth's mantle at a great depth 55.2 km to the epicente. The location of this earthquake is likely along the subducting Cotobato Trench.

Large earthquakes are not uncommon in the southern Philippines. The region surrounding the June 2026 event has experienced at least 35 earthquakes of magnitude 7.0 or greater within a 300-kilometer radius since 1900. The largest known event in the area was a magnitude 8.3 earthquake in 1918, located west of the recent epicenter. More recently, a magnitude 7.4 earthquake occurred on October 10th 2025, resulting in multiple fatalities see our post below for more information.

This earthquake was recorded by our Irish Raspberry Shake seismometers in the waveform plots that you see in the images 3-5. We usually post the waveform from Raspberry Shake's Shakenet phone app (Image 6.) but this earthquake was not well recorded (no clear P or S waves) due to the travel path of the 1st wave diffraction along the core mantle boundary and the small time window settings. Image 7. Is the path the seismic waves travelled through the Earth from the Philippines to Ireland.

Photos from QuakeShake's post 03/06/2026

On the 1st of June 2026, at 22:12:36 UTC, a large earthquake measuring M6.2 struck at a depth of 250km offshore southern Italy. The epicentre is located approximately 20km west of the Italian province of Cosenza, in the region of Calabria.

Despite the large magnitude, the event was only weakly felt (with average intensity IV on the Modified Mercalli Scale) throughout the regions of Calabria, Basilicata, Apulia and Sicily, with no damage reported at the time of writing. This is most likely due to the earthquake having occurred at such a large depth. Deep earthquakes (ie. those that occur greater than 100km deep) usually tend to occur only in subduction zones, where one tectonic plate is forced beneath another along a plate boundary. According to Italian National Institute of Geophsyics and Vulcanology (INGV), the earthquake is linked to the subduction of the Ionian lithosphere beneath Calabria, a geological process typical of the southern Tyrrhenian Sea. The area is characterised by frequent deep seismic activity and has previously recorded earthquakes of magnitude greater than M5.

Earthquakes are generally not believed to occur at depths greater than 700km beneath the Earthโ€™s surface, as the temperature at this depth is high enough that rocks become ductile instead of brittle, preventing the sudden ruptures that cause earthquakes.

Waveform plot made by INSN technical officer Paddy and highlighting our Geopark and Waterford public meeting Shakes ใ€ฐ๏ธ

Photos from QuakeShake's post 28/05/2026

A M6.9 earthquake has occurred northern in Northern Chile on 25 May 2026 at 21:52 UTC. The earthquake occurred approximately 29 km east-northeast of Calama in the Antofagasta Region, at a depth of 109 km. The earthquake occurred within one of the most seismically active regions in the world, along the boundary where the Nazca Plate is subducting beneath the South American Plate. This tectonic setting is responsible for many of Chileโ€™s largest and most destructive earthquakes. Intermediate-depth earthquakes such as this one commonly occur within the descending Nazca Plate beneath the Andes Mountains.

According to the United States Geological Survey (USGS), residents in Calama and surrounding communities reported strong shaking, and some temporary power and water interruptions occurred following the event. Chilean authorities also reported minor landslides within the Antofagasta Region. However, there were no immediate reports of fatalities or major structural damage.

Chile experiences frequent earthquakes due to its location along the Pacific Ring of Fire. The country has a long history of major seismic events, including the 1960 Valdivia earthquake โ€” the largest instrumentally recorded earthquake in history at magnitude 9.5.

Photos from QuakeShake's post 01/05/2026

Oh goly gosh last week was busy๐Ÿ˜ƒ Here is a throwback to some of the highlights:

Friday we attended the National Marine Environment Conference organised by and ๐Ÿ‘ ๐ŸŒŠ Our highlight was incredible presentation of the fin whale calls they recorded with their QuakeShake seismometer ๐Ÿ‹ We had our own display stand with an Orca and Raspberry Shake seismometer recording the event๐ŸŽค ใ€ฐ๏ธ .collins.3766

Also on Friday, UCD professor Aline Melo displayed one of our Raspberry Shakes at her daughter's primary school show and tell in Co. Wicklow. One of the students enjoyed irish dancing beside the shake ๐Ÿ‘ฏโ€โ™€๏ธ

Thursday we presented for
Marine Week live webinar about the QuakeShake programme and fin whales ๐Ÿ™‚

Wednesday to Monday we attended the British Seismology Meeting in Leeds Univeristy England and presented a presentation and poster. A highlight was learning alot about other seismology outreach programmes ๐Ÿ‘

Overall a fantastic week and thanks to all the incredible organisers!

Photos from QuakeShake's post 21/04/2026

On the 20th April 2026, at 07:53:00 UTC (17:53:00 local time), a powerful earthquake measuring M7.4 struck at a depth of 35km offshore Honshu, about 100 km ENE from Miyako, see the red circle marking the epicentre in the map in picture 2.The earthquake resulted from thrust faulting in the subduction zone between the Pacific and North America plates. A tsunami was triggered and according to the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) about 40 minutes after the earthquake origin time an 80-centimetre wave hit a port in Kuji in Iwate. A tsunami warning was issued for Japanโ€™s coastline, with waves expected to reach up to 3 meters, but the threat did not materialize, and authorities lifted the warning shortly afterward. No damage has been reported so far, but the earthquake was felt in buildings as far away as Tokyo, approximately 400 kilometers from the epicenter.

09/04/2026

You might think when you look at the ๐ŸŒ‘ that its very quiet and inactive geologically speaking..... but moonquakes do occur! Just not how we are used to ๐ŸŒquakes happening.

Unlike here on Earth they aren't mainly caused by active moving tectonic plates. Moonquakes can be triggered by Earth's gravitational pull, the moon cooling and shrinking, meteorite impacts, temperature changes and us.

We know all of this thanks to the Apollo missions ๐Ÿš€๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿš€

Nunn et all paper available at https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11214-020-00709-3

26/03/2026

We have written a blog for detailing all of our exciting findings using citizen Raspberry Shake seismometers to track fin whales ๐Ÿ‹ ๐Ÿ˜€

You can listen to the actual recordings of a fin whale singing off the coast in Waterford which was recorded by former QuakeShake station RBB07 ๐Ÿ”Š
And read to find out about the Christmas Day surprise ๐Ÿ˜ฎ ๐ŸŽ„๐ŸŽ

We have more fin whale recordings since our public meeting in the Copper Coast Geopark back in June 2025 so thanks to all of our citizen seismologist hosts for attending and hosting our shakes ๐Ÿ‘

Thanks to the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group for their excellent sightings data ๐Ÿณ

๐Ÿ‘‰Read more about the findings at our website: www.quakeshake.ie/2025/12/17/citizen-scientists-track-fin-whales-on-irelands-copper-coast/

๐Ÿ”—Or Raspberry Shakes website: www.raspberryshake.org/citizen-scientists-track-fin-whales-on-irelands-copper-coast/
www.quakeshake.ie/2025/12/17/citizen-scientists-track-fin-whales-on-irelands-copper-coast/

10/03/2026

Apologies for such a long video!๐Ÿ™ˆ I started making this video back in February when a magnitude 7.1 earthquake occured beneath Borneo with a deep epicentre of 620 kilometres. This wasnt well recorded by our Raspberry Shake seismometers as this part of the world is a bit of a longitude and latitude shadow for some Irish seismometers. Then yesterday there was a Magntude 6.0 Italian earthquake that also occurred at a very deep depth (USGS says 373km and INGV say 414km) and this got me thinking again about deep earthquakes and how they occur ๐Ÿค”

Most earthquakes happen near the Earthโ€™s surface (within about 70 km). Sometimes they occur hundreds of kilometers deep. At such depths, rocks are under extreme heat and pressure, so they usually bend instead of breaking, which is why deep earthquakes were once thought impossible. ๐Ÿชจ

They occur in areas of subduction, where one tectonic plate sinks beneath another. A cold, dense oceanic plate sinks into the mantle and remains cooler and more brittle than the surrounding rock. As it descends (sometimes 300โ€“700 km deep), intense pressure can cause sudden cracking or mineral changes, releasing energy as an earthquake ใ€ฐ๏ธ

Because these earthquakes happen deep inside the sinking plate, the shaking at the surface is often weaker than for shallow earthquakes of the same size.

10/03/2026

Apologies for such a long video!๐Ÿ™ˆ I started making this video back in February when a magnitude 7.1 earthquake occured beneath Borneo with a deep epicentre of 620 kilometres. This wasnt well recorded by our Raspberry Shake seismometers as this part of the world is a longitude and latitude shadow for Irish seismometers. Then yesterday there was a Magntude 6.0 earthquake that also occurred at a very deep depth (USGS says 373km and INGV say 414km) and this got me thinking about deep earthquakes and how they occur ๐Ÿค”

Most earthquakes happen near the Earthโ€™s surface (within about 70 km). Sometimes they occur hundreds of kilometers deep.

At such depths, rocks are under extreme heat and pressure, so they usually bend instead of breaking, which is why deep earthquakes were once thought impossible.

They occur in areas of subduction, where one tectonic plate sinks beneath another. A cold, dense oceanic plate sinks into the mantle and remains cooler and more brittle than the surrounding rock. As it descends (sometimes 300โ€“700 km deep), intense pressure can cause sudden cracking or mineral changes, releasing energy as an earthquake ใ€ฐ๏ธ

Because these earthquakes happen deep inside the sinking plate, the shaking at the surface is often weaker than for shallow earthquakes of the same size.

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