Written by on . Last updated October 27th, 2024.

A significant Magnitude 5.2 earthquake struck in the Solomon Sea 78 kilometer from Kokopo, Papua New Guinea in the night of Friday October 25th, 2024.

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Earthquake Summary

This earthquake hit under water in the Solomon Sea, right off the coast of Papua New Guinea (4 mi offshore), 78 kilometer south of Kokopo in East New Britain. The center of this earthquake had a quite shallow depth of 57 km. Shallow earthquakes usually have a larger impact than earthquakes deep in the earth.

Date and Time: Oct 25, 2024 04:52 (Port Moresby Time)
- Oct 24, 2024 18:52 Universal Time.
Location: 78 km south of Kokopo, East New Britain, Papua New Guinea.
Coordinates 5°2'48"S 152°14'24"E.
Map: Map of area around epicenter.
Map of area around epicenter. Click to open in Google Maps.
Magnitude: MAG 5.2
Detected by 232 stations. Maximum Error Range ±0.038 .
Depth: 57 km (36 mi)
A quite shallow depth.
Tsunami Risk: Low tsunami risk
Earthquakes under MAG-6.5 do not usually cause tsunami's.
Always stay cautious - More info here.

Nearby towns and cities

This earthquake may have been felt in Papua New Guinea . Kokopo in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea is the nearest significant place from the epicenter. The earthquake occurred 78 kilometer (48 mi) south of Kokopo.

Overview of nearby places

Distance Place
78 km (48 mi)
N from epicenter
Kokopo

East New Britain, Papua New Guinea.
239 km (149 mi)
WSW from epicenter
Kimbe

West New Britain, Papua New Guinea.
Cities and Towns around the epicenter of this earthquake.

Aftershocks detected

After this earthquake struck, 1 smaller aftershock occurred. At a distance of 65 km (41 mi) west-southwest of this earthquake, an aftershock struck 5 hrs later. It measured a magnitude of 5.1

Overview of foreshocks and aftershocks

Classification Magnitude When Where
Main Shock
This Earthquake
M 5.2 Oct 25, 2024 04:52
(Port Moresby Time)
-
Aftershock M 5.1 5 hrs later
Oct 25, 2024 10:00 (Port Moresby Time)
65 km (41 mi)
WSW from Main Shock.
Detected MAG2.5+ earthquakes within within 100km (62 mi), that occurred in the three days before and after the main shock.

More earthquakes coming?

Earthquakes can create aftershocks. These are generally at least 1 magnitude lower than any main shock, and as time passes the chance and strength of aftershocks decreases.

The chance that a significant earthquake like this one is followed by an even larger earthquake is not so large. On average, scientists estimate a 94% chance that a major earthquake will not be followed by an even larger one. It is still adviced to be aware of this risk

Read: How to Stay Safe during an Earthquake (cdc.gov).

Earthquakes like this happen often in the region

Earthquakes of this strength are very common in the region. This is the strongest earthquake to hit since July 12th, 2024, when a 5.5 magnitude earthquake hit 166 km (103 mi) further northwest. An even stronger magnitude 7.9 earthquake struck on December 17th, 2016.

In total, 210 earthquakes with a magnitude of 5.2 or higher have been registered within 300km (186 mi) of this epicenter in the past 10 years. This comes down to an average of once every 17 days.

Low tsunami risk

DISCLAIMER: We strongly suggest to closely monitor advice from local authorities with regards to tsunami risks. Our analysis is based on automatically collected data from external sources, and these might contain mistakes. In addition, earthquakes can cause landslides that may lead to a tsunami, or be a followed by another, potentially stonger, earthquake.

Based on early data it appears this earthquake was not strong enough (lower than MAG-6.5) to be likely to cause destructive tsunami's. However this earthquake appeared to have hit at a shallow depth under sea, so stay cautious and monitor advice from local authorities.

Tsunami Risk Factors

Factor Under Sea? MAG-6.5 or stronger? Shallow depth?
Explanation Almost all tsunami's are caused by earthquakes with their epicenter under sea or very near the sea. However stay cautious in coastal areas as earthquakes on land may cause landslides into sea, potentially still causing a local tsunami. Under MAG 6.5: Very unlikely to cause a tsunami.
MAG 6.5 to 7.5: Destructive tsunami's do occur, but are uncommon. Likely to observe small sea level changes.
MAG 7.6+: Earthquakes with these magnitudes might produce destructive tsunami's.
Most destructive tsunami's are caused by shallow earthquakes with a depth between 0 and 100km under the surface of the earth. Deeper tsunami's are unlikely to displace to ocean floor.
This Earthquake This earthquake appears to have struck under the sea. Not this earthquake.
This earthquake had a magnitude of 5.2. Earthquakes of this strength are unlikely to trigger a tsunami.
This earthquake occurred at a depth of of 57 km (36 mi). Earthquakes this shallow could trigger a tsunami.

Sources

Last updated 27/10/24 17:48 (). This article is automatically generated based on available data. We keep checking multiple sources for additional information. This article gets updated as new details on this earthquake become available.

  1. US Geographic Society (USGS): Earthquake us7000nmz2
  2. European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC): Earthquake 20241024_0000197
  3. Geonames.org: World Cities Database
  4. Google Maps: Static API
  5. Earthquakelist.org: Historic Earthquakes Database

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