Seismic Swarm PS20061108.1 in the Kuril Islands
A seismic swarm designated PS20061108.1 occurred in the Kuril Islands from 08:22 on 8 November 2006 to 02:26 on 9 November 2006. Over this 18-hour period, seven earthquakes were recorded, with magnitudes ranging from 5.0 to 5.6 and focal depths between 10 km and 60 km. The sequence began with a magnitude 5.1 event at 36 km depth, followed by six additional shocks, including a peak magnitude 5.6 at 10 km depth. Subsequent events clustered at shallow depths around 10 km, with isolated deeper occurrences at 40 km and 60 km.
This swarm took place along the Kuril-Kamchatka subduction zone, where the Pacific Plate converges with the Okhotsk Plate at rates exceeding 8 cm per year. The region forms part of the Pacific Ring of Fire and features the deep Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, active volcanic arcs, and frequent intermediate-depth seismicity driven by slab dehydration and brittle failure within the subducting lithosphere. Historical records document recurrent great earthquakes exceeding magnitude 8, underscoring the zone's capacity for both megathrust ruptures and clustered foreshock-aftershock sequences.
Seismic swarms have been documented in the Kuril Islands since 2000, with four episodes recorded through 2006. These include single swarms in 2003 and 2005, plus two in 2006. Such clusters typically reflect transient stress perturbations along the plate interface or within the overriding crust, often preceding or accompanying larger tectonic events without producing surface rupture.
The November 2006 swarm provides insight into precursory activity patterns in subduction settings. The rapid succession of moderate-magnitude events at varying depths suggests localized fluid migration or aseismic slip that temporarily elevated Coulomb stress on adjacent fault segments. Shallow events dominated the later phase, consistent with upper-plate or interface faulting, while deeper shocks indicate intra-slab processes. No damage or tsunami reports were associated with this swarm, distinguishing it from the great magnitude 8.3 mainshock that struck the same region one week later.
Further monitoring of swarm statistics in the Kuril arc contributes to refined probabilistic assessments of short-term seismic hazard along this highly active margin.
References
USGS Earthquake Catalog (historical seismicity data for Kuril Islands, 2000–2006)
Global CMT Catalog (focal mechanism and depth constraints for regional events)
Pacific Ring of Fire tectonic summaries, USGS
Kuril-Kamchatka subduction zone parameters, peer-reviewed geophysical literature (2000–2023 updates)