M 5.4 - 6 km S of Tallaboa, Puerto Rico

  • 2020-05-02 11:13:18 (UTC)
  • 17.937°N 66.727°W
  • 9.0 km depth

Tectonic Summary

The May 2, 2020, M 5.5 earthquake offshore of southwest Puerto Rico occurred as the result of oblique normal faulting at shallow depth. Preliminary focal mechanism solutions for the earthquake indicate faulting occurred as the result of slip on either a steeply dipping plane striking to the northeast, or on a moderately dipping plane striking to the southwest. At the location of this event, the North America plate converges with the Caribbean plate at a rate of about 20 mm/yr to the west-southwest. The location, depth, and focal mechanism solution for the event are consistent with an intraplate tectonic setting, with slip occurring within the lithosphere of the Caribbean plate rather than on the plate boundary interface.

This earthquake occurred near the damaging January 6, 2020 magnitude 6.4 earthquake and is an aftershock of that earthquake. The earthquake is part of a vigorous sequence in the same region that has included hundreds of small earthquakes, beginning in earnest with a M 4.7 earthquake late on December 28 and a M 5.0 event a few hours later. The sequence has included six events magnitude 5.5 and larger and over a thousand magnitude 3.0 and larger events.

Tectonics in Puerto Rico are dominated by the convergence between the North America and Caribbean plates, with the island being squeezed between the two. To the north of Puerto Rico, North America subducts beneath the Caribbean plate along the Puerto Rico trench. To the south of the island, and south of today’s earthquake, Caribbean plate lithosphere subducts beneath Puerto Rico at the Muertos Trough. This ongoing earthquake sequence is occurring in the offshore deformation zone bound by the Punta Montalva Fault on land and the Guayanilla Canyon offshore.

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