Puerto Rico
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Puerto Rico is located in North America and has a Moderate seismic risk classification. A total of 377 earthquakes have been recorded in the country's seismic history. The largest earthquake recorded in the country reached a magnitude of 5.1. With a population of 3,203,295 and a land area of 8,870 km², seismic events can have significant implications for infrastructure and public safety.
Seismic Overview
Puerto Rico is a United States territory in the northeastern Caribbean that faces some of the highest seismic hazard in the entire Caribbean region, arising from the convergence of the North American Plate and the Caribbean Plate along one of the most geologically complex boundaries in the Atlantic basin. The Puerto Rico Trench, immediately north of the island, is the deepest point in the Atlantic Ocean, reaching 8,376 metres below sea level, and represents the zone where the North American Plate descends beneath the Caribbean Plate at approximately 2 centimetres per year. The seismic setting is further complicated by the Muertos Trough south of Puerto Rico, the Anegada Trough fault zone to the east, the North America-Caribbean transform boundary expressed in the Septentrional and other faults, and a series of reverse and thrust faults within the island itself. The southwest of Puerto Rico, underlain by the Lajas Valley and offshore fault systems including the Guayanilla and Punta Montalva faults, represents the most seismically active onshore zone in recent decades. Seismic hazard is rated very high, with probabilistic ground motion values among the highest in the U.S. National Seismic Hazard Model for any populated territory.
Puerto Rico has a rich and damaging earthquake history. On 11 October 1918, a magnitude 7.1 earthquake struck off the northwest coast near Mayagüez, generating a destructive [[tsunami]] with wave heights reaching 6 metres that killed approximately 116 people and caused massive destruction to coastal infrastructure along the western coast. Beginning in late December 2019, a prolonged sequence of earthquakes struck the southwestern corner of the island, with a magnitude 5.8 event on 28 December 2019 followed by a magnitude 6.4 mainshock on 7 January 2020 — the largest earthquake to strike Puerto Rico since 1918. The 2020 sequence killed one person, injured hundreds, and rendered thousands of buildings uninhabitable in the municipalities of Guánica, Guayanilla, and Yauco; [[aftershock]] activity exceeded 10,000 events over the following year and a half. Earlier significant events include a magnitude 7.0 earthquake in 1943 and numerous M5–6 events throughout the instrumental record. The Puerto Rico Trench is considered capable of hosting a great [[subduction-zone]] earthquake in the magnitude 8–9 range, which would generate a major [[tsunami]] threatening Puerto Rico's north coast.
Puerto Rico's geology reflects complex Cretaceous island-arc volcanism, Eocene to Oligocene carbonate platform development, and Neogene to Quaternary deformation under the current Caribbean-North American convergence. The island's rugged interior consists largely of Cretaceous volcanic and plutonic rocks, while the coastal plains and valleys are underlain by Quaternary alluvial and marine sediments susceptible to [[liquefaction]] and [[seismic-wave]] amplification. The Puerto Rico Seismic Network (PRSN), operated by the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez, provides real-time monitoring and participates in the USGS ShakeAlert research programme. The PRSN also operates the Caribbean Tsunami Warning Programme, coordinating [[tsunami]] detection and alert dissemination for the northeastern Caribbean. The 2020 earthquake sequence generated significant attention to the need for improved building codes and housing retrofits, particularly for the many concrete-block structures in the southwestern municipalities.
Recent Earthquakes
| Mag | Location | Time |
|---|---|---|
| 3.41 | 56 km WSW of Stella, Puerto Rico | 1 month, 4 weeks ago |
| 1.97 | 1 km E of Magas Arriba, Puerto Rico | 1 month, 4 weeks ago |
| 2.04 | 1 km SSW of Animas, Puerto Rico | 1 month, 4 weeks ago |
| 1.97 | 1 km WSW of Guayanilla, Puerto Rico | 1 month, 4 weeks ago |
| 2.45 | 12 km S of Guánica, Puerto Rico | 1 month, 4 weeks ago |
| 2.89 | 33 km NW of Rincón, Puerto Rico | 2 months ago |
| 3.14 | 38 km NNW of San Antonio, Puerto Rico | 2 months ago |
| 3.15 | 13 km N of Garrochales, Puerto Rico | 2 months ago |
| 1.95 | 0 km SE of Maria Antonia, Puerto Rico | 2 months ago |
| 4.16 | 2 km SW of Río Lajas, Puerto Rico | 2 months ago |
Earthquakes Near Major Cities in Puerto Rico
Frequently Asked Questions
Puerto Rico has a moderate level of seismic activity. Significant earthquakes occur periodically. A total of 377 earthquakes have been recorded in Puerto Rico's seismic history.
The largest recorded earthquake in Puerto Rico had a magnitude of 5.1. Earthquakes of this size can cause significant damage depending on depth, location, and local building standards.
Puerto Rico has had 377 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.
Puerto Rico is classified in the "Moderate" seismic zone, located in North 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.
Seismic Metrics
Tectonic Plates
Fault Lines
Nearby Seismic Activity
Yearly Summary
Earthquake Safety
Puerto Rico is in a moderate seismic risk zone. Basic earthquake preparedness is advisable.
- Drop, Cover, and Hold On during shaking
- Keep an emergency supply kit with water, food, and first aid
- Identify safe spots in each room away from windows and heavy objects
- Know tsunami evacuation routes if in a coastal area