Minor mag. 1.5 earthquake - 8.8 Km NE of Bárðarbunga on Thursday, 9 October 2014 at 17:54 (GMT)
Quake Data | Interactive map | User Reports | Earlier quakes in same area | Quakes in Iceland | Northeast | East | Northwest | South | Capital Region

Minor magnitude 1.5 earthquake at 8 km depth
9 Oct 18:13 UTC: First to report: IMO after 19 minutes.
Oct 9 19:13: Magnitude recalculated from 1.4 to 1.5.
Hypocenter depth recalculated from 3.8 to 7.7 km.
Oct 9 19:13: Magnitude recalculated from 1.4 to 1.5.
Hypocenter depth recalculated from 3.8 to 7.7 km.
Magnitude: 1.5
Depth: 7.7 km
Epicenter latitude / longitude: 64.694°N / 17.39°W

Nearest volcano: Bardarbunga (8 km / 5 mi)
Nearby towns and cities:
104 km (65 mi) S of Stafn (pop: 25) --> See nearby quakes!
114 km (71 mi) S of Laugar (pop: 1000) --> See nearby quakes!
115 km (71 mi) SSE of Akureyri (pop: 17,700) --> See nearby quakes!
115 km (72 mi) WNW of Hofn (pop: 1,690) --> See nearby quakes!
150 km (93 mi) S of Norðurþing (pop: 2,230) --> See nearby quakes!
155 km (96 mi) WSW of Egilsstaðir (pop: 2,300) --> See nearby quakes!
157 km (98 mi) SE of Sauðarkrokur (pop: 2,580) --> See nearby quakes!
193 km (120 mi) ENE of Selfoss (pop: 6,510) --> See nearby quakes!
198 km (123 mi) NE of Vestmannaeyjar (pop: 4,220) --> See nearby quakes!
225 km (140 mi) ENE of Reykjavik (pop: 118,900) --> See nearby quakes!
Primary data source: IMO (Icelandic Met Office)
Estimated released energy: 1.1 x 107 joules (3.12 kilowatt hours) More info
Data for the same earthquake reported by different agencies
Info: The more agencies report about the same quake and post similar data, the more confidence you can have in the data. It takes normally up to a few hours until earthquake parameters are calculated with near-optimum precision.
Magnitude | Depth | Location | Source |
M 1.5 | 7.7 km | 8.8 km NE of Bárðarbunga | IMO |
User reports for this quake
User reports estimate the perceived ground shaking intensity according to the MMI (Modified Mercalli Intensity) scale.
At magnitude 1.5, this quake was too small to be felt by humans, but it was recorded instrumentally.