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No East Coast Tsunami Threat After Very Strong 6.9 Magnitude Mid-Atlantic Ridge Earthquake

by Weatherboy Team Meteorologist - September 4, 2022

There is no tsunami advisory in effect at this time from this earthquake.
There is no tsunami advisory in effect at this time from this earthquake.

A strong 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck the Mid Atlantic Ridge today; fortunately, the earthquake did not generate an Atlantic-wide tsunami and there is no tsunami threat to the U.S. East Coast. Both USGS and the National Weather Service Tsunami Warning Center issued updates today on the powerful quake.




According to USGS, the powerful earthquake struck at a depth of 10 km or 6.2 miles at 5:42 am ET today. The earthquake occured in a seismically active area of the Central  Mid Atlantic Ridge, which separates the South American Plate from the African Plate. In this part of the world, the two plates are moving apart, triggering earthquakes as they split above the ridge.

The epicenter for today's strong earthquake is at the orange dot inside the concentric circles on this map.  Image: USGS
The epicenter for today’s strong earthquake is at the orange dot inside the concentric circles on this map. Image: USGS

These plates are based on the scientific theory of Plate Tectonics, which describes the large-scale motion of plates making up the Earth’s lithosphere. Scientists believe tectonic processes began on Earth between 3.3 and 3.5 billion years, building upon the concept of continental drift, a scientific concept developed in the early part of the 20th century. Continental drift is the gradual movement of the continents across the Earth’s surface through geological times.




Tsunamis are giant waves caused by earthquakes or volcanic eruptions under the sea. Out in the depths of the ocean, tsunami waves do not dramatically increase in height. But as the waves travel inland, they build up to higher and higher heights as the depth of the ocean decreases. According to the National Ocean Service, the speed of tsunami waves depends on ocean depth rather than the distance from the source of the wave. Tsunami waves may travel as fast as jet planes over deep waters, only slowing down when reaching shallow waters. While tsunamis are often referred to as tidal waves, this name is discouraged by oceanographers because tides have little to do with these giant waves.

Nevertheless, due to the intensity of today’s earthquake, the National Weather Service’s Tsunami Warning Center  in Palmer, Alaska did issue a bulletin on the seismic event. “There is no tsunami danger for the U.S. east coast, the Gulf of Mexico states, or the eastern coast of Canada, ” they wrote in a bulletin to those areas. “Based on the earthquake location near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, a damaging tsunami is not expected.

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