2017 Guatemala earthquake
The 2017 Guatemala earthquake struck near the city of Malacatán in the San Marcos Department, near the Guatemala–Mexico border at 1:29 am local time (UTC−06:00) on June 14.[1] The earthquake killed five people, and caused 30 injuries, 11 of which were from Chiapas, Mexico across the border.[2] No tsunami warning was issued.
Guatemala City Champerico Quetzaltenango San Marcos | |
UTC time | 2017-06-14 07:29:04 |
---|---|
2017-06-22 12:31:03 | |
ISC event | 616639690 |
611834165 | |
USGS-ANSS | ComCat |
ComCat | |
Magnitude | 6.9 Mw |
6.8 Mw | |
Depth | 93.0 km |
38.1 km | |
Epicenter | 14.909°N 92.009°W |
Type | Normal Thrust |
Areas affected | Guatemala and Mexico |
Max. intensity | VII (Very strong) VI (Strong) |
Landslides | Yes |
Casualties | 5 dead, 30 injured 4 injured |
The earthquake was followed up by a large Mw 6.8 earthquake on June 22 off the coast of the Escuintla Department although both events are not directly related. It did not kill anyone but four people were injured and damages reported.[3]
Tectonic setting
The Middle America Trench is a destructive plate boundary where the oceanic Cocos Plate subducts beneath the Caribbean Plate off the Guatemalan coast. This subduction zone runs from Mexico to Costa Rica where large earthquakes have been sourced from. At the same time, the Cocos Plate bends and flexes before descending beneath the Caribbean Plate thus faults break out within the downgoing slab, producing intraslab earthquakes.
Earthquake
The magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck at an intermediate depth of 93 km under the Sierra Madre de Chiapas range, at the front of Volcán Tajumulco. It did not occur on the interface of the megathrust fault. Rather, it was a normal fault earthquake within the Cocos Slab.[4][5]
As for the 6.8 earthquake on June 22, it originated on the megathrust boundary at a much shallow depth, but because the earthquake was offshore, shaking was less intense.[6][7]
Impacts
A woman in San Marcos was killed by a collapsing wall while a homeless man in San Sebastian Retalhuleu died after being crushed during the collapse of a church.[8] Heart attacks attributed to the earthquake claimed the lives of three women that morning.[8] The earthquake collapsed some homes and triggered landslides that blocked roads and caused some injuries.[9][10] It was strongly felt in Chiapas, Mexico where the quake further injured 11 people.[11] Several homes collapsed and at least 20 had sustained damages. Six schools and two government buildings were damaged.
The earthquake of 22 June caused some damage to Antigua Guatemala, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that was the former capital before that status was moved to Guatemala City. The earthquake caused panic in El Salvador, where people fled to the streets. It triggered minor landslides and cracked adobe buildings.[12]
See also
References
- "5 Dead in Magnitude-6.9 Earthquake in Western Guatemala". VOA News. 14 June 2017. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- Menchu, Sofia (14 June 2017). "Strong quake kills two as church collapses in Guatemala, shakes Mexico". Reuters. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- Castillo, Mariano (22 June 2017). "Magnitude 6.8 earthquake causes damage in Guatemala, officials say". CNN. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- Jacobson, David (14 June 2017). "Deep M=6.9 earthquake in Guatemala possibly preceded by foreshock sequence". Temblor. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- "M 6.9 - 2km SSW of San Pablo, Guatemala". USGS-ANSS. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- "M 6.8 - 28km SW of Puerto San Jose, Guatemala". USGS-ANSS. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- David Jacobson and Ross Stein (22 June 2017). "M6.8 earthquake frames Guatemala's seismic past and future". Temblor. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- "Guatemala earthquake leaves five dead". Al Jazeera. 15 June 2017. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- The Associated Press (14 June 2017). "Massive earthquake triggers landslides in Guatemala". CBS News. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- Breslin, Sean (15 June 2017). "Guatemala Earthquake Kills 5, Injures 7; Damage, Landslides Reported". The Weather Channel. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- "There are 11 injured by earthquake in Chiapas (in Spanish)". El Universal. 14 June 2017. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.
- AP (23 June 2017). "Magnitude 6.8 earthquake recorded off Guatemalan coast". Associated Press. Retrieved 18 Dec 2020.