4.6
3 hr 30 min ago
KAş, TURKEY
Mar 6, 2026 @05:35 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.7
3 hr 44 min ago
ATTU STATION, ALASKA
Mar 6, 2026 @05:21 UTC
SEAQUAKE
5.1
4 hr 5 min ago
VILYUCHINSK, RUSSIA
Mar 6, 2026 @05:00 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.8
11 hr 9 min ago
FIJI REGION
Mar 5, 2026 @21:56 UTC
SEAQUAKE
5.5
13 hr 40 min ago
NIKOLSKI, ALASKA
Mar 5, 2026 @19:25 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.8
16 hr 28 min ago
HIRARA, JAPAN
Mar 5, 2026 @16:37 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.9
16 hr 38 min ago
KIMBE, PAPUA NEW GUINEA
Mar 5, 2026 @16:26 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.8
17 hr 16 min ago
VOLCANO ISLANDS, JAPAN REGION
Mar 5, 2026 @15:49 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.5
20 hr 6 min ago
ADAK, ALASKA
Mar 5, 2026 @12:59 UTC
SEAQUAKE
5.0
22 hr 11 min ago
CENTRAL EAST PACIFIC RISE
Mar 5, 2026 @10:54 UTC
SEAQUAKE
5.2
22 hr 17 min ago
HIRARA, JAPAN
Mar 5, 2026 @10:48 UTC
SEAQUAKE
5.2
1 day ago
BURICA, PANAMA
Mar 5, 2026 @05:21 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.6
1 day ago
LIKISá, TIMOR LESTE
Mar 5, 2026 @01:43 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.8
1 day ago
SOUTH OF THE FIJI ISLANDS
Mar 5, 2026 @01:42 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.8
1 day ago
COQUIMBO, CHILE
Mar 5, 2026 @01:08 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.5
1 day ago
ATTU STATION, ALASKA
Mar 4, 2026 @19:39 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.9
1 day ago
ATTU STATION, ALASKA
Mar 4, 2026 @19:04 UTC
SEAQUAKE
5.3
1 day ago
CHIRILAGUA, EL SALVADOR
Mar 4, 2026 @18:56 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.9
1 day ago
FAKFAK, INDONESIA
Mar 4, 2026 @18:08 UTC
SEAQUAKE
4.5
1 day ago
PUERTO MADERO, MEXICO
Mar 4, 2026 @17:55 UTC
SEAQUAKE

M4.6 - Kaş, Turkey

Magnitude

4.6 - Richter scale

Depth

38.189 Km

Location

Kaş, Turkey (162km SSW)
LAT 34.8213, LON 29.0231

Date-Time

Mar 06, 2026 05:35:24 UTC
Mar 06, 2026 07:35:24 UTC +02:00 at epicenter

Source

USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)

Event ID(s)

us7000s2gb

Population

0 people (est. 100km radius)

Distances from major cities

  • 163.0 km (101.3 miles) SSW of Kas, Antalya, Turkey
  • 180.4 km (112.1 miles) SSW of Demre, Antalya, Turkey
  • 193.2 km (120.1 miles) SSE of Ródos, South Aegean, Greece
  • 193.4 km (120.2 miles) SSE of Ialysós, South Aegean, Greece
  • 272.4 km (169.3 miles) SSE of Mugla, Mugla, Turkey

Tectonic Summary

Seismotectonics of the Mediterranean Region and Vicinity

The Mediterranean region is seismically active due to the northward convergence (4-10 mm/yr) of the African plate with respect to the Eurasian plate along a complex plate boundary. This convergence began approximately 50 Ma and was associated with the closure of the Tethys Sea. The modern day remnant of the Tethys Sea is the Mediterranean Sea. The highest rates of seismicity in the Mediterranean region are found along the Hellenic subduction zone of southern Greece, along the North Anatolian Fault Zone of western Turkey and the Calabrian subduction zone of southern Italy. Local high rates of convergence at the Hellenic subduction zone (35mm/yr) are associated with back-arc spreading throughout Greece and western Turkey above the subducting Mediterranean oceanic crust. Crustal normal faulting throughout this region is a manifestation of extensional tectonics associated with the back-arc spreading. The region of the Marmara Sea is a transition zone between this extensional regime, to the west, and the strike-slip regime of the North Anatolian Fault Zone, to the east. The North Anatolian Fault accommodates much of the right-lateral horizontal motion (23-24 mm/yr) between the Anatolian micro-plate and Eurasian plate as the Anatolian micro-plate is being pushed westward to further accommodate closure of the Mediterranean basin caused by the collision of the African and Arabian plates in southeastern Turkey. Subduction of the Mediterranean Sea floor beneath the Tyrrhenian Sea at the Calabrian subduction zone causes a significant zone of seismicity around Sicily and southern Italy. Active volcanoes are located above intermediate depth earthquakes in the Cyclades of the Aegean Sea and in southern Italy.

In the Mediterranean region there is a written record, several centuries long, documenting pre-instrumental seismicity (pre-20th century). Earthquakes have historically caused widespread damage across central and southern Greece, Cyprus, Sicily, Crete, the Nile Delta, Northern Libya, the Atlas Mountains of North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula. The 1903 M8.2 Kythera earthquake and the 1926 M7.8 Rhodes earthquakes are the largest instrumentally recorded Mediterranean earthquakes, both of which are associated with subduction zone tectonics. Between 1939 and 1999 a series of devastating M7+ strike-slip earthquakes propagated westward along the North Anatolian Fault Zone, beginning with the 1939 M7.8 Erzincan earthquake on the eastern end of the North Anatolian Fault system. The 1999 M7.6 Izmit earthquake, located on the westward end of the fault, struck one of Turkey's most densely populated and industrialized urban areas killing, more than 17,000 people. Although seismicity rates are comparatively low along the northern margin of the African continent, large destructive earthquakes have been recorded and reported from Morocco in the western Mediterranean, to the Dead Sea in the eastern Mediterranean. The 1980 M7.3 El Asnam earthquake was one of Africa's largest and most destructive earthquakes within the 20th century.