Mw6.6 earthquake hits Jan Mayen in the Arctic with some damage
Last update: August 30, 2012 at 3:25 pm by By Armand Vervaeck and James Daniell
Most important Earthquake Data:
Magnitude : Mw6.6
UTC Time : 13:43:24 UTC on August 30th, 2012
Local time at epicenter : 12:43:24 UTC on August 30th, 2012
Depth (Hypocenter) : 8km
Geo-location(s) : 93km NW away from Olonkinbyen, Svalbard and Jan Mayen
There has been reports of some damage and a rockslide, but no injuries among the 44 people living there.
A M5.2 aftershock also hit around 8 mins after the mainshock.
UPDATE:- This is reported to be one of the largest Norwegian earthquakes on record.
In 2008, a M6.2 was reported in Svalbard.
According to NORSAR “The largest earthquakes in historical times in Norway and surrounding offshore areas occurred in the Rana region in 1819, M 5.8, in the Vøring Basin in 1866, M 5.7, in the outer Oslofjord in 1904, M 5.4 and in the Viking Graben in 1927, M 5.3. The last earthquakes above M 5 include an M 5.3 event in the Vøring Basin in 1988, in an area with almost no earlier seismicity, and an M 5.2 event in the northeastern North Sea in 1989.”
The Oslofjord earthquake of 1904 is the best known earthquake causing damage in Norway.
So it looks like another earthquake record has been broken – as will continue to occur as better recording of earthquakes through time continues worldwide leading to better hazard maps in the future.
Further damage is yet to be confirmed as well as a possible tsunami caused by underwater landslide.
Beerenberg Volcano – over 2200m above sea level (Wiki Commons) – erupted in 1970 and 1985.
SUMMARY:-
A major earthquake has hit off Jan Mayen Island in Norway in the Arctic Ocean.
The Amazing coastline of Jan Mayen with the Beerenberg Volcano
44 people currently live on the small island of which the main export is gravel and also doubles as a telecommunications base for Norway.
from: http://earthquake-report.com/2012/08/30/mw6-6-earthquake-hits-jan-mayen-in-the-arctic-with-some-damage/