This is a list of notable earthquakes that had epicentres in Spain, or significantly affected the country.
Geology
editSpain lies on the Eurasian plate just to the north of its boundary with the African plate. The southernmost part of Spain is the zone with the highest seismicity in the country. The African plate is obliquely converging with the Eurasian plate at about 5 mm/year.[1]
Earthquakes
editDate | Region | Mag. | MMI | Deaths | Injuries | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021-08-12 | Granada, Andalusia | 4.6 Mw | VII | Minor damage | [2][3] | ||
2021-01-28 | Granada, Andalusia | 4.2 Mw | IV | Minor damage | [4][5] | ||
2021-01-26 | Granada, Andalusia | 4.5, 4.2, 4.4 Mw | IV-V | Three earthquakes in a 30 minutes period. Minor damages in households. Many people spent the night out in the street. | [6] | ||
2021-01-23 | Granada, Andalusia | 4.2 Mw | IV | 1 | Minor damage/Part of an earthquake swarm | [7][8] | |
2016-01-25 | Alboran Sea | 6.3 Mw | VI | 1 | 30+ | Moderate damage | [9] |
2011-05-11 | Lorca, Murcia | 5.1 Mw | VIII | 9 | 403 | Damage to a clocktower and old buildings | |
2010-11-04 | Granada, Andalusia | 6.3 Mw | III | 609 km depth | [10] | ||
2005-01-29 | Murcia | 4.4 Mw | VI | 565 houses damaged | [11] | ||
1999-02-02 | Murcia | 4.8 Mw | VII | 20 | Minor damage | [12] | |
1997-05-22 | Galicia | 5.4 Mw | VII | 1 | Minor damage | [13] | |
1993-12-23 | Andalusia | 5.3 Mw | VII | Minor damage | [14] | ||
1956-04-19 | Albolote, Granada | 5.0 Mw | VIII | 11 | [15] | ||
1954-03-29 | Granada, Andalusia | 7.8 Mw | V | Property damage at Granada, 640 km depth | [15][16] | ||
1884-12-25 | Granada, Málaga, Almería | 6.7 Mw | IX | 1,200 | 3,000+ | Heavy damage | |
1829-03-21 | Torrevieja, Alicante | 6.6 Mw | IX | 389 | 377 | More than 2,000 buildings were destroyed | [15] |
1817-03-18 | La Rioja | XI | Heavy damage, felt in Madrid | [15] | |||
1806-10-27 | Pinos Puente, Granada | 5.3 Ms | VIII | 13 | |||
1804-08-25 | Almería | 6.4 Mw | VIII–IX | 1,000 | 100+ | Severe damage | |
1804-01-13 | Motril, Granada | 6.7 | VII–VIII | 2 | |||
1790-10-10 | Algeria | 6.0–6.5 | VIII–IX | 3,000 | Tsunami reported. Damaging in Spain. All fatalities reported in Algeria. | ||
1755-11-01 | Atlantic Ocean | 8.5–9.0 Mw | XI | 10,000–100,000 | Major tsunami, widespread damage in southwestern Spain | ||
1748-03-23 | Estubeny, Valencia | 6.2 | IX | 38 | [15] | ||
1680-10-09 | Granada, Andalusia | 6.8 | VII–IX | ||||
1658-12-31 | Almería | VIII–IX | |||||
1644-06-19 | Muro de Alcoy, Alicante | VIII | 38 | ||||
1550-04-19 | Almería | VI–X | |||||
1531-09-30 | Baza, Granada, Andalusia | VIII–IX | |||||
1522-09-22 | Almería | 6.8–7.0 Mw | X–XI | 2,500 | [15] | ||
1518-11-09 | Vera, Almería | IX | 165 | [15] | |||
1504-04-05 | Carmona, Sevilla | 6.8 | VIII–IX | 32 | [15] | ||
1494-01-26 | Málaga | VIII | [15] | ||||
1431-04-24 | Granada, Andalusia | 6.8 | VIII–IX | 1,000 | [15][17] | ||
1428-02-02 | Girona, Catalonia | 6.7 | IX | 800 | [15] | ||
1373-03-02 | Aragon | VIII–IX | [15] | ||||
1356-08-24 | Cape St Vincent, Portugal | VIII | Damage in Seville | [15] | |||
1169 | Jaén Andalusia | VIII–IX | [15] | ||||
1170 | Andújar, Jaén | 6.0 | VIII–IX | ||||
1048 | Alicante, Valencia | VIII | [15] | ||||
1024-03-15 | South of Spain | VIII–X | [15] | ||||
974 | Córdoba, Andalusia | [15] | |||||
957 | Córdoba, Andalusia | [15] | |||||
944 | Córdoba, Andalusia | [15] | |||||
881-06-10 | Gulf of Cádiz, Andalusia | 7.2 | [15] | ||||
880 | Córdoba, Andalusia | 5.7 | VIII | [15] | |||
Note: The inclusion criteria for adding events are based on WikiProject Earthquakes' notability guideline that was developed for stand alone articles. The principles described also apply to lists. In summary, only damaging, injurious, or deadly events should be recorded. |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "M6.4 Al Hoceima, Morocco Earthquake of 24 February 2004" (PDF). United States Geological Survey. 27 February 2004. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- ^ "M 4.6 – 3 km SW of Santafe, Spain". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
- ^ Hoy, Granada (2021-08-14). "El mayor terremoto sentido en Granada desde 1984 deja daños leves y un gran "susto" en los granadinos". Granada Hoy (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-08-18.
- ^ "M 4.3 – 2 km ENE of Chauchina, Spain". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
- ^ Hoy, Granada (January 28, 2021). "Terremoto en Granada: "Estoy vivo de milagro, se ha caído el techo de mi casa"". Granada Hoy (in European Spanish). Retrieved January 28, 2021.
- ^ "El vídeo de la noche de los terremotos en Granada: 40 seísmos en ocho horas". 27 January 2021.
- ^ "M 4.2 – 2 km WSW of Santafé, Spain". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
- ^ "Spain earthquake: Granada rocked by magnitude 4.2 tremors – half a million people impacted". express.co.uk. 2021-01-23. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
- ^ "M 6.3 – 50 km NNE of Al Hoceima, Morocco". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
- ^ "M 6.3 – Strait of Gibraltar". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
- ^ "M 4.4 – 19 km SW of Bullas, Spain". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
- ^ "M 4.8 – 12 km ESE of Calasparra, Spain". United States Geological Survey.
- ^ "M 5.4 – 3 km NW of Becerreá, Spain". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
- ^ "M 5.3 – 7 km E of Adra, Spain". United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Instituto Geográfico Nacional. "Terremotos más importantes (En España)" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-03-12.
- ^ "M 7.8 – 4 km W of Dúrcal, Spain". United States Geological Survey.
- ^ "Así fueron los cinco terremotos de Granada que están entre los más importantes de la historia de España". 28 May 2019.
External links
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Earthquakes in Spain.
- Catálogo sísmico de la Península Ibérica (880 a. C.-1900) Earthquake Catalogue for the Iberian Peninsula (880 BC–1900 AD) (in Spanish)
- Earthquakes in Spain, Iberia Nature