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Paraguay

Seismic Zone: Low South America
Total Earthquakes
0
Largest Magnitude
Seismic Zone
Low

Paraguay is located in South America and has a Low seismic risk classification. A total of 0 earthquakes have been recorded in the country's seismic history. With a population of 6,109,644 and a land area of 406,752 km², seismic events can have significant implications for infrastructure and public safety.

Seismic Overview

Paraguay occupies the interior of South America, far from any active plate boundary, and sits largely on the Paraná craton and associated sedimentary basins that form the stable core of the continent. The country has very low seismicity from indigenous sources; its geological position within the stable South American Platform means that the stresses driving Andean tectonics are largely dissipated before reaching Paraguayan territory. The Paraná Basin — a vast intracratonic sedimentary basin covering much of Paraguay — experienced Mesozoic flood basalt volcanism (the Serra Geral / Paraná flood basalt province) but has been tectonically quiet since that episode approximately 130 million years ago. Occasional moderate intraplate earthquakes do occur in Paraguay, typically associated with reactivation of ancient basement structures beneath the sedimentary cover, but these are infrequent and rarely of damaging [[magnitude]]. The primary distant seismic influence comes from Andean events to the west; large Bolivian deep-focus earthquakes and Chilean subduction events occasionally produce felt shaking in Asunción and other cities due to the efficiency of [[seismic-wave]] propagation across the stable craton.

Paraguay's earthquake history records occasional felt events but no significant damaging earthquakes in the modern era. The 1999 Bolivia deep-focus earthquake (magnitude 8.2) was felt across the region including Paraguay. Andean subduction events of magnitude 7+ from the Bolivia-Argentina border occasionally produce felt motion in western Paraguay. A small cluster of intraplate micro-earthquakes has been documented in the Chaco region, associated with old basement fault structures. Induced seismicity from the Itaipú hydroelectric dam — one of the world's largest dams, on the Paraná River at the Brazil-Paraguay border — has been documented, including micro-earthquakes attributed to reservoir loading of ancient basement faults. Asunción, on the Paraguay River, sits on relatively stable alluvial and weathered basement material with moderate amplification potential compared to the shield rocks to the south.

Paraguay's geological framework is dominated by the Paraná Basin, a Late Paleozoic to Mesozoic sedimentary sequence up to 5 kilometres thick resting on Precambrian basement. The basin was formed by thermal subsidence of the South American craton following Paleozoic rifting events and was subsequently covered by the enormous Paraná flood basalts of the Cretaceous, which now form a thick layer of basalt visible in river cuts along the eastern margin of the country. The basement beneath the sedimentary cover includes Proterozoic metamorphic and igneous terranes related to the same mobile belt systems exposed in Brazil and Uruguay. Paraguay's stable geological setting means that earthquake risk assessment focuses primarily on the potential for distant large events — particularly from Bolivia's deep seismic zone or Andean subduction — to produce felt shaking in the capital, rather than on locally generated events. [[seismic-wave]] monitoring in Paraguay is limited to a few national stations supplemented by regional network data from Argentina and Brazil.

Recent Earthquakes

Mag Location Time
No recent earthquakes.

Earthquakes Near Major Cities in Paraguay

Frequently Asked Questions

Paraguay has a low level of seismic activity. Large earthquakes are infrequent but not impossible. A total of 0 earthquakes have been recorded in Paraguay's seismic history.

Paraguay has had 0 recorded earthquakes. This count includes events of all magnitudes detected by seismic monitoring networks. The actual number of earthquakes may be higher, as smaller events can go undetected.

Paraguay is classified in the "Low" seismic zone, located in South America. Seismic zones indicate the relative level of earthquake hazard based on historical activity, geological conditions, and proximity to tectonic plate boundaries.

During an earthquake, Drop, Cover, and Hold On. Get under a sturdy desk or table, protect your head and neck, and hold on until shaking stops. Move away from windows and heavy objects. After the earthquake, check for injuries and be prepared for aftershocks.

Country earthquake risk is assessed using several factors: proximity to tectonic plate boundaries, historical seismicity (frequency and magnitude of past events), geological conditions, population density in seismic zones, and building code enforcement. QuakeFYI assigns seismic zones from 0 (no risk) to 4 (very high) based on these factors.

A seismic zone is a geographic area classified by the level of earthquake hazard. Zone 0 has negligible risk, Zone 1 has low risk, Zone 2 has moderate risk, Zone 3 has high risk, and Zone 4 has very high risk. These zones are determined by historical earthquake data, tectonic setting, and geological conditions.

Countries along the Pacific Ring of Fire experience the most earthquakes. Japan, Indonesia, Chile, the Philippines, and Iran consistently record the highest seismic activity. The United States (especially Alaska and California), Turkey, and Mexico are also among the most seismically active nations.

Population density amplifies earthquake risk because more people and infrastructure are exposed to potential damage. A magnitude 7.0 earthquake in a densely populated city can cause thousands of casualties, while the same event in an uninhabited area may cause none. Building codes and emergency preparedness greatly reduce risk in populated areas.

Seismic density measures the concentration of earthquake activity relative to a country's land area, expressed as earthquakes per 1,000 square kilometers. A high seismic density indicates frequent earthquake activity per unit area, helping compare seismic risk between countries of different sizes.