Worldwide Volcano earthquakes and Volcano earthquake notifications – New Zealand

Last update: February 28, 2013 at 11:20 pm by By

Ruapehu volcano – latest eruption : 2007
Ruapehu, one of New Zealand’s most active volcanoes, is a complex stratovolcano constructed during at least 4 cone-building episodes dating back to about 200,000 years ago. The 110 cu km dominantly andesitic volcanic massif is elongated in a NNE-SSW direction and is surrounded by another 100 cu km ring plain of volcaniclastic debris, including the Murimoto debris-avalanche deposit on the NW flank. A series of subplinian eruptions took place at Ruapehu between about 22,600 and 10,000 years ago, but pyroclastic flows have been infrequent at Ruapehu. A single historically active vent, Crater Lake, is located in the broad summit region, but at least five other vents on the summit and flank have been active during the Holocene. Frequent mild-to-moderate explosive eruptions have occurred in historical time from the Crater Lake vent, and tephra characteristics suggest that the crater lake may have formed as early as 3000 years ago. Lahars produced by phreatic eruptions from the summit crater lake are a hazard to a ski area on the upper flanks and to lower river valleys.
(some text & images : Smithsonian Institution)

SRC Location UTC Date/time M D INFO
GEONET Ohakune Jun 10 17:22 2.0 17 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune May 29 15:27 0.8 26 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune May 29 15:24 0.8 40 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Apr 28 03:32 2.7 2 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Apr 24 22:20 2.2 52 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Apr 02 08:14 1.0 32 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Mar 29 18:44 1.4 17 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Mar 28 17:50 1.9 117 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Mar 27 12:53 0.8 36 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Feb 18 18:22 0.5 96 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Jan 27 10:04 2.6 146 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Jan 26 21:30 2.1 129 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Ohakune Dec 25 00:05 2.5 91 MAP I Felt It
ER Ruapehu, New Zealand (startup Record) Jan 01 00:00 0.1 0 MAP I Felt It


Taranaki volcano (Mount Egmont) – latest eruption : 1854
The nearly symmetrical, steep-sided cone of Taranaki (also known as Egmont), is New Zealand’s largest andesitic stratovolcano. Taranaki is surrounded by a ring plain of debris-avalanche and lahar deposits that and extend to the coast. The isolated Taranaki volcanic center is located on the west coast of central North Island at the southern end of a volcanic arc extending NW along the Northland Peninsula. Taranaki is the youngest and SE-most of a group of three volcanoes beginning with the Pleistocene Kaitoke Range. Fanthams Peak breaks the symmetry of Taranaki on its south flank, and four lava domes are located on the lower north and south flanks. Multiple episodes of edifice collapse have occurred in the past 50,000 years. Explosive activity, sometimes accompanied by pyroclastic flows and lava dome growth, has occurred frequently throughout the Holocene. Taranaki’s latest eruption took place in 1854 AD.
(some text & images : Smithsonian Institution)

SRC Location UTC Date/time M D INFO
GEONET Opunake May 11 20:09 2.7 6 MAP I Felt It
GEONET New Plymouth May 09 05:29 2.7 5 MAP I Felt It
GEONET New Plymouth May 04 19:28 2.3 5 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Stratford Apr 28 20:20 3.0 228 MAP I Felt It INFO
GEONET Opunake Apr 24 19:04 2.4 5 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Opunake Apr 24 18:11 3.0 5 MAP I Felt It INFO
GEONET Opunake Apr 17 16:13 3.0 5 MAP I Felt It INFO
GEONET New Plymouth Apr 17 08:42 2.7 55 MAP I Felt It
GEONET New Plymouth Apr 16 12:36 2.6 14 MAP I Felt It
GEONET Stratford Apr 15 14:33 2.9 261 MAP I Felt It
  • plymouth - I felt the shaking it wasnt that much of a shake it was light but i felt the ground moving!
  • GEONET New Plymouth Apr 15 06:53 3.9 303 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET Opunake Apr 14 17:41 2.6 14 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Stratford Mar 28 01:22 2.4 159 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Stratford Mar 11 15:56 2.8 225 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Mar 11 13:25 2.1 6 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Stratford Mar 04 20:26 3.0 225 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET Opunake Feb 16 22:56 2.5 129 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Feb 09 13:56 2.8 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET New Plymouth Feb 06 10:12 2.3 6 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Feb 04 00:58 2.4 7 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Jan 21 14:54 2.2 6 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Stratford Jan 21 05:51 3.3 225 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Stratford Jan 20 23:48 2.2 23 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Jan 17 16:55 2.9 10 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Jan 16 06:22 2.6 6 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Jan 13 14:11 2.4 7 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET New Plymouth Jan 13 09:04 2.4 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Jan 11 15:46 2.5 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET New Plymouth Jan 11 11:19 2.8 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Opunake Jan 11 09:49 0.8 8 MAP I Felt It


    Okataina volcano – latest activity : 1981
    The massive, dominantly rhyolitic Okataina Volcanic Centre is surrounded by extensive ignimbrite and pyroclastic sheets produced during multiple caldera-forming eruptions. Numerous lava domes and craters erupted from two subparallel NE-SW-trending vent lineations form the Haroharo and Tarawera volcanic complexes. Lava domes of the Haroharo complex, at the northern end of the Okataina Volcanic Centre, occupy part of the 16 x 26 km Pleistocene Haroharo caldera, which formed incrementally between 300,000 and 50,000 years before present (BP). The oldest exposed rocks on the caldera floor are about 22,000 years old. The Tarawera complex at the southern end of Okataina consists of 11 rhyolitic lava domes and associated lava flows. The oldest domes were formed as late as about 15,000 years BP, and the youngest were formed in the Kaharoa eruption about 800 years BP. The NE-SW Tarawera vent lineation extends from the two dacitic cones of Maungaongaonga and Mangakakaramea on the SW to Mount Edgecumbe on the NE. Construction of the Haroharo and Tarawera complexes impounded lakes Rotoiti, Totoehu, Okataina, and Tarawera against the outer margins of the Okataina ring structure. A major hydrothermal area is located at Waimangu; the world-renowned Pink and White Terrace siliceous sinter deposits were destroyed during the major basaltic explosive eruption of 1886.
    (some text & images : Smithsonian Institution)

    SRC Location UTC Date/time M D INFO
    GEONET Rotorua Jun 15 21:45 3.2 191 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET Rotorua Jun 01 08:53 2.1 133 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 11 17:40 1.8 8 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 11 17:07 1.6 8 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 11 17:04 1.7 8 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 11 16:58 1.6 0 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 11 16:56 2.3 10 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 11 16:54 1.9 8 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 11 16:30 1.7 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua May 03 20:48 2.2 101 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Apr 18 06:02 2.9 114 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Apr 03 14:37 2.7 103 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Mar 27 11:52 1.8 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Mar 27 11:09 2.5 182 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Feb 10 06:56 2.4 284 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Feb 03 14:11 2.0 104 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Jan 26 07:24 1.9 9 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Jan 11 18:03 2.1 128 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Jan 04 06:10 2.3 146 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Rotorua Feb 08 07:30 3.5 3 MAP I Felt It


    Tongariro volcano – latest activity : 2006 – latest eruption : 1977
    Tongariro is a large andesitic volcanic massif, located immediately NE of Ruapehu volcano, that is composed of more than a dozen composite cones constructed over a period of 275,000 years. Vents along a NE-trending zone extending from Saddle Cone (below Ruapehu volcano) to Te Mari crater (including vents at the present-day location of Ngauruhoe) were active during a several hundred year long period around 10,000 years ago, producing the largest known eruptions at the Tongariro complex during the Holocene. North Crater stratovolcano, one of the largest features of the massif, is truncated by a broad, shallow crater filled by a solidified lava lake that is cut on the NW side by a small explosion crater. The youngest cone of the complex, Ngauruhoe, has grown to become the highest peak of the massif since its birth about 2500 years ago. The symmetrical, steep-sided Ngauruhoe, along with its neighbor Ruapehu to the south, have been New Zealand’s most active volcanoes during historical time.
    (some text & images : Smithsonian Institution)

    SRC Location UTC Date/time M D INFO
    GEONET Turangi Jun 15 20:45 1.4 0 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Jun 03 21:26 2.6 123 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi May 25 03:52 1.4 79 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi May 16 18:36 2.5 103 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi May 02 16:27 1.0 17 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi May 01 22:22 1.4 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Apr 12 22:05 3.9 161 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET Turangi Apr 10 06:14 1.8 117 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Apr 06 07:01 1.2 24 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Mar 15 12:52 1.8 109 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Mar 08 02:31 1.4 10 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Feb 23 20:04 1.5 11 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Jan 27 17:39 2.3 122 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Jan 25 21:20 1.4 1 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Ohakune Jan 18 07:31 1.1 27 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Jan 10 13:51 0.8 5 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Dec 28 18:22 2.6 125 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Turangi Dec 24 14:11 1.6 5 MAP I Felt It
    USGS North Island Of New Zealand Jul 07 00:50 5.0 88 MAP I Felt It
    EMSC North Island Of New Zealand Jul 07 00:50 5.2 83 MAP I Felt It


    White Island volcano – latest eruption : 2001
    Uninhabited 2 x 2.4 km White Island, one of New Zealand’s most active volcanoes, is the emergent summit of a 16 x 18 km submarine volcano in the Bay of Plenty about 50 km offshore of North Island. The 321-m-high island consists of two overlapping andesitic-to-dacitic stratovolcanoes; the summit crater appears to be breached to the SE because the shoreline corresponds to the level of several notches in the SE crater wall. Volckner Rocks, four sea stacks that are remnants of a lava dome, lie 5 km NNE of White Island. Intermittent moderate phreatomagmatic and strombolian eruptions have occurred at White Island throughout the short historical period beginning in 1826, but its activity also forms a prominent part of Maori legends. Formation of many new vents during the 19th and 20th centuries has produced rapid changes in crater floor topography. Collapse of the crater wall in 1914 produced a debris avalanche that buried buildings and workers at a sulfur-mining project.
    (some text & images : Smithsonian Institution)

    SRC Location UTC Date/time M D INFO
    GEONET White Island Jun 19 20:59 2.7 107 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 19 00:44 2.3 6 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 18 12:29 3.1 242 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET Te Kaha Jun 14 19:45 2.3 56 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 13 06:48 2.2 80 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 12 02:00 2.9 177 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 11 14:27 2.3 8 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 09 06:30 2.0 7 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 08 19:14 2.1 87 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 07 09:12 3.4 224 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET White Island Jun 06 18:37 3.0 118 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET White Island Jun 06 10:13 3.3 252 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 05 18:45 2.9 122 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 02 16:46 2.3 132 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island Jun 01 16:34 2.3 168 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 31 13:10 2.5 138 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 31 10:08 2.0 100 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Whakatane May 30 22:15 2.8 179 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 29 18:29 2.5 0 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 29 15:42 2.0 10 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 29 09:42 2.6 33 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 29 05:18 2.6 24 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 28 08:48 1.7 48 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET White Island May 28 07:49 2.7 33 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 27 14:44 3.2 195 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET White Island May 24 23:33 2.3 100 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET Whakatane May 24 01:53 3.0 246 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 22 05:05 2.4 108 MAP I Felt It
    GEONET White Island May 21 23:04 3.0 194 MAP I Felt It INFO
    GEONET White Island May 20 17:52 1.9 70 MAP I Felt It


    SHARE YOUR EARTHQUAKE EXPERIENCE WITH US

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    City/Village where you felt the earthquake
    MMI II (Very weak shaking) ?
    People :
    Felt by persons at rest, on upper floors or favorably placed.
    MMI III (Weak shaking) ?
    People :
    Felt indoors; hanging objects may swing, vibration similar to passing of light trucks, duration may be estimated, may not be recognized as an earthquake.
    MMI IV (Light shaking) ?
    People :
    Generally noticed indoors but not outside. Light sleepers may be awakened. Vibration may be likened to the passing of heavy traffic, or to the jolt of a heavy object falling or striking the building.
    Fittings :
    Doors and windows rattle. Glassware and crockery rattle. Liquids in open vessels may be slightly disturbed. Standing motorcars may rock.
    Structures :
    Walls and frames of buildings, and partitions and suspended ceilings in commercial buildings, may be heard to creak.
    MMI V (Moderate shaking) ?
    People :
    Generally felt outside, and by almost everyone indoors. Most sleepers awakened. A few people alarmed.
    Fittings :
    Small unstable objects are displaced or upset. Some glassware and crockery may be broken. Hanging pictures knock against the wall. Open doors may swing. Cupboard doors secured by magnetic catches may open. Pendulum clocks stop, start, or change rate.
    Structures :
    Some large display windows cracked. A few earthenware toilet fixtures cracked.
    MMI VI (Strong shaking) ?
    People Felt by all. People and animals alarmed. Many run outside. Difficulty experienced in walking steadily.
    Fittings :
    Objects fall from shelves. Pictures fall from walls. Some furniture moved on smooth floors, some unsecured free-standing fireplaces moved. Glassware and crockery broken. Very unstable furniture overturned. Small church and school bells ring. Appliances move on bench or table tops. Filing cabinets or "easy glide" drawers may open (or shut).
    Structures :
    Slight damage to buildings with low standard. Some stucco or cement plaster falls. Large display windows broken. Damage to a few weak domestic chimneys, some may fall.
    Environment :
    Trees and bushes shake, or are heard to rustle. Loose material may be dislodged from sloping ground, e.g. existing slides, talus slopes, shingle slides.
    MMI VII (Very strong shaking) ?
    People
    General alarm. Difficulty experienced in standing. Noticed by motorcar drivers who may stop.
    Fittings :
    Large bells ring. Furniture moves on smooth floors, may move on carpeted floors. Substantial damage to fragile contents of buildings.
    Structures :
    Unreinforced stone and brick walls cracked. Low standard buildings cracked with some minor masonry falls. A few instances of damage to buildings of ordinary workmanship. Unbraced parapets, unbraced brick gables, and architectural ornaments fall. Roofing tiles, especially ridge tiles may be dislodged. Many unreinforced domestic chimneys damaged, often falling from roof-line. Water tanks Type I burst. A few instances of damage to brick veneers and plaster or cement-based linings. Unrestrained water cylinders (hot-water cylinders) may move and leak. Some common windows cracked. Suspended ceilings damaged.
    Environment :
    Water made turbid by stirred up mud. Small slides such as falls of sand and gravel banks, and small rock-falls from steep slopes and cuttings. Instances of settlement of unconsolidated or wet, or weak soils. Some fine cracks appear in sloping ground. A few instances of liquefaction (i.e. small water and sand ejections).
    MMI VIII (Severe shaking) ?
    People Alarm may approach panic. Steering of motorcars greatly affected. Structures : Low standard buildings heavily damaged, some collapse. ordinary workmanship buildings damaged, some with partial collapse. Reinforced masonry or concrete buildings damaged in some cases. A few instances of damage to buildings and bridges designed and built to resist earthquakes. Monuments and pre-1976 elevated tanks and factory stacks twisted or brought down. Some pre-1965 infill masonry panels damaged. A few post-1980 brick veneers damaged. Decayed timber piles of houses damaged. Houses not secured to foundations may move. Most unreinforced domestic chimneys damaged, some below roof-line, many brought down. Environment : Cracks appear on steep slopes and in wet ground. Small to moderate slides in roadside cuttings and unsupported excavations. Small water and sand ejections and localized lateral spreading adjacent to streams, canals, lakes, etc.
    MMI IX (Violent shaking) ?
    Structures Many low standard buildings destroyed. Ordinary workmanship buildings heavily damaged, some collapse. Reinforced masonry or concrete buildings damaged, some with partial collapse. Buildings and bridges designed and built to resist earthquakes damaged in some cases, some with flexible frames seriously damaged. Damage or permanent distortion to some buildings and bridges, designed and built to normal use standards. Houses not secured to foundations shifted off. Brick veneers fall and expose frames. Environment : Cracking of ground conspicuous. Landsliding general on steep slopes. Liquefaction effects intensified and more widespread, with large lateral spreading and flow sliding adjacent to streams, canals, lakes, etc.
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