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Rare earthquake swarm north of Sion, Switzerland

rare-earthquake-swarm-saviese-switzerland

An exceptionally active earthquake swarm is ongoing near Saviese, north of Sion, Switzerland beginning in the night of November 4 to November 5, 2019, according to the Swiss Seismological Service (SED) at ETH Zurich. Such an accumulation of earthquakes is rather untypical for Switzerland.

SED has already recorded more than 100 events, wherein 12 had Magnitudes of 2.5 or bigger and were felt by the population of the Sion region up to Sierre.

quake-swarms-switzerland-nov-4-2019

Image credit: SED

Four of the strongest quakes reached Magnitudes 3.0 and 3.3 and were sporadically felt even in the Bernese Oberland.

The agency has gathered several hundred felt reports on its website. 

felt-earthquakes-switzerland-nov-5-2019

Image credit: SED

Such an accumulation of earthquakes is rather untypical for Switzerland, SED scientists said.

Earthquake swarms with many events within days or weeks occur regularly. However, only rarely as many perceptible quakes happen within a small period of time. This means that predicting the future development of this sequence is not possible.

However, the seismic activity usually decays after days or weeks at most. There is a probability of 5% to 10% for significantly stronger earthquakes to happen within the following days.

quake-swarms-switzerland-nov-6-2019

Image credit: EMSC

Valais is Switzerland's seismically most active region. The quakes of these days occurred in one of the most prominent zones of activity, which extends south of the Diablerets and Wildhorn massifs in parallel to the main valley.

The last felt event in the area before the start of the current swarm was on January 14, 2018. Even though small, instrumentally detectable quakes are observed nearly on a weekly basis.

The last strongly devastating earthquake in Switzerland took place on January 25, 1946, with Magnitude 5.8, which happened also near the Wildhorn and led to considerable damage in an expanded area.

Featured image credit: EMSC

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One Comment

  1. I’ve lived in and experienced one earthquake in Switzerland back around 1991, I believe? It happened in the middle of the night in the remote hotel I was staying in. It shook my bed dramatically and I was convinced it was a poltergeist. I put the light on and asked it to do it again, saying I wasn’t afraid, more impressed? Nothing happened so, I put the light out and waited, nothing? I drifted off to sleep and the next morning, over breakfast, the owner’s wife asked if the earthquake had bothered me? Seeing the combined look of puzzlement and amusement on my face, she asked if I was okay? I then told her what I’d assumed it was. She cracked out laughing, as did all the other guests in the dining room!

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