M 5.9 - 38 km WNW of Linxia Chengguanzhen, China

  • 2023-12-18 15:59:30 (UTC)
  • 35.739°N 102.815°E
  • 12.0 km depth
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  • Economic Alert Histogram
    Estimated Economic Losses
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    Estimated Fatalities
  • Ground Failure
    Landslide Estimate

    Limited area affected

    Little or no population exposed

    Liquefaction Estimate

    Little or no area affected

    Little or no population exposed

  • Origin
    Review Status
    REVIEWED
    Magnitude
    5.9 mww
    Depth
    12.0 km
    Time
    2023-12-18 15:59:30 UTC
  • Contributors

    US

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    USGS National Earthquake Information Center, PDE
    Authoritative Network

Tectonic Summary

The December 18, 2023, M5.9 earthquake in north-central China occurred as a result of reverse faulting at shallow depth. The earthquake occurred on either a north-striking, steeply dipping, reverse fault or a south-southeast striking, shallowing-dipping, reverse fault. The region where the December 18th earthquake occurred is an intraplate (i.e., not at a plate boundary) region located on the northern margin of the Tibetan Plateau. The Tibetan Plateau is a high topographic region north of the Himalaya Mountains that developed in response to ongoing collision between the India and Eurasia plates.

The Tibetan Plateau is tectonically active, and earthquakes are common throughout the region. Within 250 kilometers of today's event, 23 M5.5 and larger earthquakes have occurred since 1900. The largest of these is a M7.7 earthquake in May 1927, to the north that resulted in roughly 40,000 fatalities. The 1927 earthquake resulted in extreme damage in the Gulan-Wuwei area and resulted in damaging landslides. In April 1990, a M6.5 earthquake, immediately preceded by a M6.3 foreshock and followed by a M6.3 aftershock, led to at least 126 fatalities and extensive shaking damage and landslides. Earthquake-related losses in China are common, even for moderate magnitude earthquakes, owing to the proximity of large population centers to shaking, the prevalence of structures that are vulnerable to earthquake shaking, and the occurrence of landslides in steep topography.

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