Country profile · USGS ComCat
Earthquakes in Mexico Earthquake
Mexico Earthquake ranks 181st of 215 countries by catalogued seismic activity - a country with limited but non-zero seismic activity. Below: the full M6+ event history, magnitude and depth profile, and yearly trend, straight from USGS data.
- 2
- M4+ events (since 2005)
- 5
- Major M6+ (since 1900)
- M8.2
- Strongest
- ~0
- M4+ per year
The verdict
Mexico Earthquake has logged 2 M4+ earthquakes since 2005 and 5 major M6+ events since 1900, the strongest reaching magnitude 8.2.
- #181
- of 215 countries by M4+ activity
- 2
- catalogued M4+ events (2005–present)
- M8.2
- strongest earthquake on record
- 5
- major M6+ events since 1900
Average catalogued magnitude is 7.7 - most events are moderate M4–5 tremors that are felt but rarely cause damage.
Major (M6+) earthquakes in Mexico Earthquake by year
Count of significant (magnitude 6.0+) events catalogued each year
- 1932
1932: 1 major (M6+) events
1
- 1985
1985: 1 major (M6+) events
1
- 1995
1995: 1 major (M6+) events
1
- 2010
2010: 1 major (M6+) events
1
- 2017
2017: 1 major (M6+) events
1
What this shows Mexico Earthquake's most active year for major earthquakes was 1932 (1 M6+ events). Major-quake counts are irregular, they track the episodic release of tectonic stress, not a smooth trend.
Magnitude distribution of major events
Breakdown of the 5 significant (M6+) earthquakes on record for Mexico Earthquake.
M8+
4
80.0%
M7.0-7.9
1
20.0%
Depth of major earthquakes
Hypocentral depth of the 5 M6+ events, shallow quakes shake the surface hardest. Average depth: 31 km.
Shallow (<70 km)
5
100.0% of events
Intermediate (70–300 km)
0
0.0% of events
Deep (>300 km)
0
0.0% of events
Strongest earthquakes in Mexico Earthquake
The 5 most powerful events on record (USGS, since 1900).
| Mag | Location | Depth | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8.2 | 2017 Tehuantepec, Mexico Earthquake | 47.4 km | Sep 8, 2017 |
| 8.1 | 1932 Jalisco, Mexico Earthquake | 35.0 km | Jun 3, 1932 |
| 8.0 | 1995 Colima-Jalisco, Mexico Earthquake | 33.0 km | Oct 9, 1995 |
| 8.0 | 1985 Michoacan, Mexico Earthquake | 27.9 km | Sep 19, 1985 |
| 7.2 | The 2010 Sierra El Mayor, B.C., Mexico Earthquake | 10.0 km | Apr 4, 2010 |
Significant earthquake record (5 events)
Every catalogued magnitude-6.0-and-above earthquake in Mexico Earthquake since 1900, most recent first.
| Mag | Location | Depth | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8.2 | 2017 Tehuantepec, Mexico Earthquake | 47.4 km | Sep 8, 2017 |
| 7.2 | The 2010 Sierra El Mayor, B.C., Mexico Earthquake | 10.0 km | Apr 4, 2010 |
| 8.0 | 1995 Colima-Jalisco, Mexico Earthquake | 33.0 km | Oct 9, 1995 |
| 8.0 | 1985 Michoacan, Mexico Earthquake | 27.9 km | Sep 19, 1985 |
| 8.1 | 1932 Jalisco, Mexico Earthquake | 35.0 km | Jun 3, 1932 |
Countries with similar seismic activity
Comparable catalogued earthquake frequency to Mexico Earthquake.
Central African Republic
2 M4+ events · strongest M4.7
Chad
2 M4+ events · strongest M4.4
Congo-Uganda
2 M4+ events · strongest M4.7
Kahramanmaras earthquake sequence
2 M4+ events · strongest M7.8
Lesotho
2 M4+ events · strongest M4.5
Reunion
2 M4+ events · strongest M5.3
Understand the data
Frequently asked questions
How many earthquakes have occurred in Mexico Earthquake? ▼
What was the strongest earthquake in Mexico Earthquake? ▼
How seismically active is Mexico Earthquake? ▼
How deep are earthquakes in Mexico Earthquake? ▼
Where does this data come from? ▼
About this data
Every figure on this page is computed directly from the USGS Comprehensive Earthquake Catalog (ComCat), the public-domain record maintained by the USGS Earthquake Hazards Program. Two series are combined: a worldwide catalog of magnitude-4.0-and-above events from 2005 onward, the period over which the global seismograph network reliably detects and locates earthquakes everywhere, and a historical series of significant magnitude-6.0-and-above events stretching back to 1900. Magnitudes use the moment-magnitude scale (Mw), the modern standard that supersedes the older Richter scale; because the scale is logarithmic, each whole step represents roughly thirty-two times more energy released. Depth is measured in kilometres from the surface, and shallow earthquakes generally produce stronger shaking than deep ones of the same magnitude. Counts reflect what instruments recorded, not every tremor that occurred, and recent events can be revised as seismologists refine the catalog.
Source: USGS ComCat, verify with USGS → · See our methodology for the full pipeline.
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