HomeLatestEarthquake of magnitude 6.6 rattles Philippine Sea

Earthquake of magnitude 6.6 rattles Philippine Sea

Philippine Sea, December 27 (ANI): An earthquake of magnitude 6.6 rattled the Philippine Sea on Saturday, an announcement by the National Center for Seismology (NCS) stated.

The earthquake occurred at a depth of 65km.

In a put up on X, the NCS stated, ‘EQ of M: 6.6, On: 27/12/2025 20:35:56 IST, Lat: 24.64 N, Long: 122.12 E, Depth: 65 Km, Location: Philippine Sea.’

https://x.com/NCS_Earthquake/status/2004936249958957172?s=20

The Philippine Sea borders the Philippines to its east, but it surely’s an enormous a part of the western Pacific Ocean, with its ground being the Philippine Sea Plate; whereas the Philippines has sovereign rights over its adjoining waters (the West Philippine Sea inside the South China Sea), the broader Philippine Sea is a big oceanic basin shared with different nations like Japan and Taiwan.

The Philippines lies within the Pacific Ring of Fire, a tectonic belt of volcanic arcs and oceanic trenches within the Pacific Ocean.

John Dale B Dianala, assistant professor on the National Institute of Geological Sciences, the University of the Philippines in Diliman, informed Al Jazeera that simply by advantage of the geographic and geologic setting of the nation, the Philippines is house to many onshore and offshore tectonic faults.

‘The entire size of the Philippines, round 1,800km, is correct alongside the boundary of two main tectonic plates – the Philippine Sea plate and Eurasian plate – a part of the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire. These two plates, hundreds of kilometres large, have been pushing towards one another for tens of millions of years at two to 3 occasions the speed of fingernail progress,’ he stated.

‘Each earthquake is a manifestation of the periodic launch of the stress alongside lengthy fractures on these plates – what geologists name ‘faults’ – which rupture a number of metres of motion alongside a fault in giant earthquakes,’ he additional informed Al Jazeera.

‘When the displacement includes vertical uplift of the seafloor from an offshore fault, like within the Philippine Trench to the east of the nation, the motion displaces the water column from the depths of the ocean that then propagate to the floor and coasts within the type of tsunamis. Strong shaking may also trigger submarine landslides that may additionally set off tsunamis,’ he added. (ANI)

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