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    Home » Shallow 5.4 earthquake in South Sandwich Islands region
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    Shallow 5.4 earthquake in South Sandwich Islands region

    February 17, 2026
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    EuroWire, BERLIN: A shallow earthquake struck the South Sandwich Islands region in the South Atlantic early Tuesday, with updated readings from the German Research Centre for Geosciences placing the event at magnitude 5.4 after an initial estimate of 5.6. The quake occurred at 03:36:39 UTC at a fixed depth of 10 kilometers, with the epicenter near 57.32 degrees south latitude and 30.13 degrees west longitude.

    Shallow 5.4 earthquake in South Sandwich Islands region
    Seismic monitors revise South Sandwich Islands region quake to magnitude 5.4 at shallow depth.

    The South Sandwich Islands form a remote volcanic island arc southeast of South Georgia and north of Antarctica, with no permanent population. The tremor was centered far from major cities and shipping hubs, and there were no immediate reports of injuries or damage linked to the earthquake in the hours after it was recorded.

    Seismic monitoring services described the event as offshore, with shaking limited to an isolated oceanic area. NOAA’s U.S. Tsunami Warning Centers showed no tsunami warning, advisory, or watch in effect at the time, and no tsunami-related impacts were reported in connection with the quake.

    The magnitude 5.4 earthquake followed a separate seismic event in the same broad region roughly 24 hours earlier. The German center listed that Monday quake at magnitude 5.7 with a depth of about 37 kilometers, underscoring the frequent earthquake activity along the island chain’s tectonic boundary.

    Remote South Atlantic location

    Tuesday’s earthquake was recorded as a confirmed event by the German monitoring network, which issues rapid global solutions based on seismic stations worldwide. The center’s updated solution classified the quake using moment magnitude, a standard scale for estimating the size of moderate to large earthquakes from seismic wave energy.

    The South Sandwich Islands sit above an active subduction system where one tectonic plate descends beneath another, generating recurrent earthquakes and supporting a chain of volcanic islands. Scientists track the region closely because its offshore earthquakes can be large, even though the nearest land areas are sparsely inhabited and often inaccessible for direct observation.

    Tectonic setting and recent activity

    Earthquakes in the South Sandwich Islands region are typically centered beneath the ocean floor, and many occur at shallow to intermediate depths. The broader South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands territory is administered by the United Kingdom, and activity is monitored primarily through international seismic networks rather than local instrumentation.

    While Tuesday’s quake was moderate in size, the wider area has produced much larger events in recent years, including earthquakes strong enough to generate tsunamis detected across ocean basins. For Tuesday’s event, available monitoring reports focused on its updated magnitude, depth, and offshore coordinates, with no confirmed reports of damage or disruption.

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